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RECOMMENDED 

OKLAHOMA  LIBRARY  COMMISSION 

STATE  CAPITOL,  OKLAHOMA  CITY 


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From  THE  CHILDREN'S  HOMER:  The  Adventures  of 
Odysseus  and  the  Tale  of  Troy.  By  Padraic  Colum. 
Illustrated  by  Willy  Pogany.    The  Macmillan  Company. 


BOOKS  FOR 

BOYS  AND  GIRLS 

OF  OKLAHOMA 


A  SELECTED  LIST  OF  THE  BEST  JUVENILES  i 

Arran^cl  under  author,  title  and  subject  « 

with  approximate  grades  indicated  i 


RECOMMENDED 

by  the 

^  OKLAHOMA  LIBRARY  COMMISSION 

\  STATE  CAPITOL,  OKLAHOMA  CITY 


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CO-OPERATIVE  Publishing  Co.,  Guthrie,  Okla. 


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CONTENTS 


Page 

Picture   Books    and    Primers 1 

Religion    5 

Ethics  and  Conduct 5 

Mythology   6 

Fables  ^ 8 

Stories  of  Fancy  and  Imagination 8 

Folk  Lore  and  Legend 11 

Patriotism    and    Citizenship 13 

Nature    and    Science 15 

Astronomy  16 

Electricity  and  Physics  17 

Physical  Geography  and  Geology 17 

Chemistry 18 

Botany,  Farming  and  Forestry 18 

Gardening 20 

Animals  20 

Animal  Stories  22 

Birds 24 

Insects  and  Insect  Stories 25 

Prehistoric  Man -^6 

Industries    and    Inventions 27 

Handiwork  for  Boys  and  Girls 29 

Physiology  and  Health 31 

Amusements,  Sports  and  Games : 31 

Art  and  Music 34 

Collections  of  Literature,  Readers  and  Speakers 35 

Poetry  and  Plays 38 

Fiction 42 

Description   and   Travel 56 

Stories  of  Real  People 62 

Biography,   Individual 67 

American  History 70 

Indians    72 

English  History 74 

General    History 74 

Reference  Books 77 

Some  Books  on  Vocational  Guidance 79 

Some  Books  on  Education 79 

Fine  Illustrated  Editions  of  Children's  Books 81 

Author  and  Title  Index 85 

List  of  Publishers  113 


O 


FOREWORD 

Why  has  the  Oklahoma  Library  Commission  prepared 
this  list?  To  meet  a  real  need  for  a  guide  to  worthwhile 
books  which  can  be  read,  understood  and  appreciated  by 
the  Boys  and  Girls  of  Oklahoma.  Because  of  the  demand 
from  parents,  teachers  and  librarians  for  such  a  list. 

The  purpose  of  the  list  is  to  answer  such  questions,  as : 
What  is  the  best  book  for  a  child  on  a  given  subject?  Who 
is  the  author?  What  is  the  price?  Where  is  it  published? 
Where  should  it  be  shelved?  (Full  particulars  are  given 
regarding  each  book ) . 

Selection  of  hooks  has  been  given  careful  considera- 
tion. Books  of  practical  information  and  vocational  value 
have  been  given  equal  consideration  with  those  of  literary 
and  cultural  value.  Only  those  are  included  which  have 
been  able  to  pass  the  critical  test  of  actual  use  and  enjoy- 
ment by  Boy  and  Girl  readers. 

Authorities  on  children's  literature  have  been  con- 
sulted freely.  Only  titles  which  have  received  indorse- 
ment from  several  leading  authorities  are  included  in  the 
list.  It  represents  the  collective  work  of  many  people  and 
will  be  a  valuable  guide  to  the  best  available  in  children's 
literature. 

Acknowledgments  for  annotations  are  made  to  the 
following  sources:  A.  L.  A.  Booklist;  Children's  Cata- 
logue, and  the  excellent  lists  of  Cleveland,  New  Jersey,  New 
York,  Oregon,  Pittsburg,  and  Wisconsin. 

Approximate  grades  only,  in  which  a  book  may  have 
special  value  is  indicated.  Ability  to  understand  and  ap- 
preciate the  printed  page  varies  as  widely  among  children 
as  among  adults. 

School  libraries  of  the  state  may  obtain  copies  of  this 
list  for  permanent  use  upon  request  of  teacher  or  librarian. 
Copies  will  be  loaned  for  individual  use. 

Publishers'  prices ^  as  given,  are  subject  to  change. 
Generous  discounts  on  large  orders  may  usually  be  ob- 
tained. 

Use  of  special  symbol.  As  an  aid  in  selecting  books 
for  school  libraries  the  asterisk  (*)  has  been  used  to 
indicate  titles  for  first  purchase. 


TO  THE  LIBRARIAN  OR  TEACHER 

Books  on  this  list  are  available  for  inspection  through 
the  Traveling  Library  service  of  the  Oklahoma  Library 
Commission. 

The  Library  Commission  is  a  department  of  state 
authorized  to  give  advice  to  school,  free  and  public  li- 
braries upon  matters  pertaining  to  library  organization*, 
and  administration,  and  to  circulate  Traveling  Libraries 
for  the  benefit  of  people  within  the  state  who  are  without 
library  service. 

Several  thousand  hooks  are  available  for  general  read- 
ing. They  may  be  used  with,  but  are  not  intended  to  take 
the  place  of  the  school  libraries  which  should  be  provided 
by  every  school  district. 

Traveling  Libraries  of  tw^enty-five  (25)  volumes  will  be 
sent  schools,  farm  clubs  and  other  organizations  of  five  or 
more  members  upon  application. 

A  Community  Library  of  from  125  to  200  volumes,  in- 
tended as  a  nucleus  for  a  public  library,  is  loaned  for  six 
months.    The  books  cover  a  wide  range  of  subjects. 

Individual  loans  of  one  to  five  volumes  are  sent  for 
two  weeks. 

Transportation  is  the  only  expense.  Books  are  sent 
collect  and  must  be  returned  prepaid. 

Directions  for  organization  of  school  and  public  li- 
braries may  be  obtained  upon  request. 

Books  for  Blind  may  be  borrowed  by  any  blind  person 
without  expense  for  transportation. 


V 


BOOKS  FOR  BOYS  AND  GIRLS 
OF  OKLAHOMA 


Books  recommended  for  first  purchase  are  marked  with  *. 

Figures  In  parenthesis  following  title,  suggest  the  school  grades  for  which  the 
book  in  suitable.  Classification  number  precedes  grades  indicated.  The  entire  list 
having  been  prepared  for  "Juvenile"  use  the  prefix  "j"  before  class  numbers  has  been 
omitted. 

PICTURE   BOOKS  AND   PRIMERS. 

Adelborg,   Ottilia.     Clean   Peter  and   the   children  of   Grubbylea. 

Longmans       1.50 
In  which  the  dirty  children  are  taken  in  hand  by  Clean  Peter. 
Fiction         (1-3) 

Bannerman,  Helen.     Story  of  little  black  Sambo.  Stokes        .75 

For  youngest  readers. 
Fiction         (1-2) 

*BlaisdeII,  M.  F.    Boy  Blue  and  his  friends,     (school  ed.)     Little      1.00 
Very  attractive  book  for  the  child's  own  reading.    Will  create  interest 
and    enthusiasm    for    independent    reading.     By    the    same    author    and  ■* 

imiform  with  these  are  the  following : 
Cherry  tree  children. 
Polly   and  Dolly. 
Pretty  Polly  Flinders. 
Tommy   Tinker's  book. 
372.4  (2-3) 

Bond,  C.  J.    Tales  of  little  cats.  Volland        .75 

Fiction         (2-3) 
Brooke,  L.  L.     Golden  groose.  Warne        .75 

398          (1-2) 
Brooke,  L.  L.     Johnny  Crow's  garden.  Warne        .75 

Fiction         (1-2) 
Brooke,  L.  L.    Three  bears,  Warne        .75 

398  (1-2) 

Brooke,  L.  L.    Three  little  pigs.  Warne        .75 

398          (1-2) 

*Browne,  C.  L.  and  Bailey,  0.  S.     Jingle  primar.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

Based  on  Mother  Goose  rhymes  and  folk  tales.    Attractively   printed 
and  illustrated. — A.  L.  A. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Burgess,  Gelett  Stokes       2.50 

Goops  and  how  to  be  them;  a  manual  of  manners  for  polite  infants, 
including  many  virtues  both  by  precept  and  example. 
817  (2-3) 

Caldecott's  picture  books;  miniature  ed.    Vol.  I,  Warne       2.25 

Contains  the  following:    No.  1,    Diverting  history  of  John  Gilpin,  etc. 

No.   2.     House   that  Jack  built,   etc.     No.    3.     Hey,    diddle   diddle,   etc. 

No.   4.     Come,   lasses  and  lads,   etc. 
These  may  also  be  had  separately  at  60c  each. 

821  (1-2) 

Chad  wick,    M.   L.   Pratt.     Puss   in  boots — Reynard   the  fox;    first 

reader.     (Action,  imitation  and  fun  ser.)  Educ.  Pub.        .60 

372.4  (1) 

Chadwick,  M.  L.  Pratt.    Three  bears.     (Action,  imitation  and  fun 

ser.)  Educ.  Pub.        .60 

372.4         (1) 


PICTURE  BOOKS  AND  PRIMERS 


Chadwick,    M.    L.    Pratt.      Three    little    kittens.      Chicken    Little 

(Action,  imitation  and  fun  ser.)  Educ.  Pub.         .60 

372.4         (1) 

♦Cory,  F.  Y.     Little  Boy  Blue.  Bobbs         .75 

A  collection  of  Mother  Goose  Jingles,  beautifully  illustrated. 
398.8  (1-2) 

Cox,  Palmer.    Brownie  primer.  Century        .75 

A  very  popular  primer  with  humorous  illustrations. 
372.4  (1-2) 

♦Craik,  G.  M.    Bow-wow  and  Mew-mew.  Beckley        .55 

A  new  edition  of  an  old  favorite,  "So-fat  and  Mew-mew." 
Fiction         (2-3) 

Gates,  Mrs.  J.  S.    Child's  flrst  book.  Houghton       1.75 

Gay  with  pictiu-es  and  charming  in  text. 
372.4  (1) 

♦Goldsmith,  Oliver.     Goody  Two-shoes;   ed.  by  C.  Welsh.     Heath         .56 
A  story  attributed  to  Oliver  Goldsmith. 
Fiction         (2-3) 

Grover,  E.  O.     Art-literature  readers:     Primer.  Atkinson         .68 

372.4         (1) 

Grover,  E.  O.     Folk-lore  readers;  Vol.  1.  Atkinson         .68 

Contains  nursery   rhymes,  fables  and  fairy  tales. 
372.4  (1) 

♦Grover,  E.  O.     Overall  boys;   a  first  reader.  Rand       1.00 

Similar  to  "Sunbonnet  babies."     One  long  story,  not  numerous  short 
ones. — ^A.  L.  A. 
372.4  (1) 

♦Grover,  E.  O.     Sunbonnet  babies  primer.  Rand       1.00 

Stories  and  pictures  of  two  little   girls,  in  color.     Very  popular  with 
children. 
372.4  (1) 

Hix,    Melvin.     Once-upon-a-time  stories.  Longmans         .60 

The  little  red  hen — Titty  mouse  and  Tatty  mouse — Mouse  that  lost  her 
tail,    etc.      Printed    in    large    type    with    attractive    black    and    white 
illustrations. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Holbrook,  Florence.     Hiawatha  primer.  Houghton         .84 

Based   on   Longfellow's    poem.     For   the    child's    own    reading.     Fully 
illustrated. — Cleveland. 
372.4  (1-2) 

♦Howard,  F.  -W.     Banbury  Cross  stories.  Merrill         .60 

Popular  nursery  tales  not   easily   found.     Very   simply   told  in   words 
of  one  syllable  and  illustrated  with  line  drawings. — ^A.  L.  A. 
398  (1-2) 

Jacobs,  N.  C.     Art  and  life  primer.  Flanagan         .65 

Contains   many    reproductions    of    good    pictures    and    short    sentences 
about  them. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Lane,  M.  A.  L.    Stories  for  children.    (Electic  readings.)    Amer.  Bk.         .52 

Stories  and  poems  which  children  may  read. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Lansing,  M.  F.    Rhymes  and  stories.  Ginn         .64* 

Mother   Goose   rhymes   and   animal   nursery   tales   such   as,    The   three 
little  pigs.    Popular  with  the  children.— Cleveland 
398.8  (2-3) 

Lefevre,  Follcite.    Cock,  the  mouse  and  the  little  red  hen.    Jacobs      1.25 
An  old  tale  told  and  illustrated  with  colored  pictures. 
398.4  (1-2) 


PICTURE  BOOKS  AND  PRIMERS  3 

Livingston,  Robert.    What  daddies  do;  old  fashioned  rhymes  for 
new-fangled    kiddies,    with    pictui-es    by   A.    E,    Hunt. 

Houghton      1.25 
"Rhymes  for  little  children  about  the  lawyer,  the  carpenter,  the  police- 
man,  the  doctor,   the  motorman,  and  other  sorts  of  "daddies,"  with  a 
picture  for  every  rhyme. — Cleveland. 
372.4  (2-3) 

Longmans'  fairy  readers.  Longmans 

1.  Longman's  fairy  tales  of  a  fox,  a  dog,  a  cat  and  a  magpie.        .25 
398.9         (1-3) 

2.  Jack  and  the  bean  stalk,  and  Brother  and  Sister.  .30 
398.4         (1-3) 

3.  Snowdrop  and  other   stories,    ed.   by   Mrs.    T.   B.    Heller         .30 
398.4         (1-3) 

Lucia,   Rose.     Peter  and   Polly  in  autumn.     Peter   and   Polly   in 

spring.     Peter  and   Polly  in   summer.     Peter  and   Polly   in 

winter.  Amer.  Bk.         .60 

A  series  of  attractive  primers. 

372.4  (2-3) 

McCullough,   A.   W.     Little   stories   for   little   people.    Amer.   Bk.         .52 

A  first  reading  book  containing  easy  stories  and  verses. 

372.4  (2-3) 

Mother  Goose.     Book  of  nursery  rhymes;   melodies  arranged  by 

Charles  Welsh.  Heath         .76 

398.8          (1-2) 
Mother  Goose.    Everychild's  Mother  Goose;  ed.  by  Carolyn  Wells, 

music  by  Sidney  Homer.  Macmillan       2.25 

398.8          (1-2) 
Mother    Goose.     Litte    Mother   Goose,    by   Jessie   Wilcox    Smith. 

Dodd       1.50 
A  miniature   of  the   larger  Jessie   Wilcox   Smith   Mother   Goose,   with 

same  beautiful  pictures. 

398.8  (1-2) 

Mother  Goose,  or  The  old  nursery  rhymes.  Warne       1.00 

Forty-eight  illustrations  in  color  by  Kate  Greenaway. 

398.8  (1-2) 

Mother  Goose.    Mother  Goose  melodies;   ed.  by  William  Wheeler. 

Houghton       2.50 

398.8  (1-2) 

Mother  Goose.    Only  true  Mother  Goose  melodies;  ed.  by  Munroe 

and  Francis.  Lothrop         .75 

Reprinting   of  an   old  edition  published  in   1833.     Contains  an  intro- 
duction by  Dr.  Edward  Everett  Hale.    Much  action  and  imagination  in 
the   crude   woodcuts. — Cleveland. 
398.8  (1-2) 

Murray,  Clara.     Child  at  play.  Little       1.00 

Very  simple  words  and  sentences  for  beginners  accompanied  by  dainty 
pictures  in  colors. 
372.4  (2) 

Murray,  Clara.     Playtime.  Little       1.00 

Begins  with  easy  sentences  and  pictures  in  color.    Gradually  grows  up 
to  short  stories  about  children  and  their  pets  and  games. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Nida,  W.  L.,  and  S.  H.    Child's  Robinson  Crusoe.  Beckley         .65 

Fiction         (2-3) 

O'Neill,  Rose.    Kewpie  primer,  verse  and  music  by  Elizabeth  V. 

Quinn.  Stokes       1.00 

Illustrated  in  colors. 
372.4  (1-2) 

Perrault,  Charles.    Tales  of  Mother  Goose;   tr  by  Charles  Welsh. 

(Home  and  school  classics.)  Heath  60 

398.4         (1-3) 


4  PICTURE  BOOKS  AND  PRIMERS 

Potter,  Beatrix.    Tales  of  Benjamin  Bunny.  Warne  ea.         .75. 

Tale  of  Johnny  Townmouse.         Tale  of  Petter  Rabbit. 
Tale  of  Squirrel  Nutkin.  Tale  of  Tom  Kitten. 

The  best  of  a  series  of  twelve  very  small  picture  books  v^ith  slight  text 
that   are    popular    with    children. 
Fiction         (1-2) 

Poulsson,  Emille.     Runaway  donkey,  and  other  rhymes  for  chil- 
dren. Lothrop       1.50 

Rhymed  stories  of  home  pets,  with  simple  Illustrations  which  children 
like. 
811      (2-3) 

Poulsson,  Emilie.    Through  the  farmyard  gate.  Lothrop       1.50 

811         (1-2) 

Pyle,  Katherine.     Careless  Jane.  Button       1.25 

"Verses    and   pictures    telling    of    Georgie    Lie-abed,    Boisterous    Ann, 
Untidy  Amanda  and  other  careless  children  whose  faults  led  them  into 
trouble." 
811  (2-3) 

Smith,  E.  Boyd.     Circus  and  all  about  it.  Stokes       2.50^ 

Pictures  in  color  and  black  and  white. 
Fiction         (2-4) 

Smith,  E.  Boyd.    Story  of  Pocahontas  and  Capt.  John  Smith  told 
by  means  of  twenty-four  full  page  colored  pictures. 

Houghton       3.00 
920         (3-4) 

Smith,  L.  R.     Tale  of  Bunny  Cottontail.  Flanagan         .60; 

Adventures  of  two  little  rabbits,  illustrated  by  outline  drawings. 
Fiction         (1-2) 

Smith,  L.  R.     Circus  book.  Flanagan         .70 

Pictures  of  circus  animals  with  notes  for  dramatization  of  stories. 
Fiction         (2f-3) 

Smythe,  E.  L.     Reynard  the  fox.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

Child's  reader.    A  popular  story  illustrated  by  excellent  woodcuts. 
398.9         (1-3) 

Stevenson,  R.  L.    Child's  garden  of  verses;  illus.  by  E.  Mars  and 

M.  H.  Squire.  Rand         .75 

An  abridged  edition  illustrated  in  colors. 
82'!  (2-4) 

Tileston,  M.  W.    Children's  hour.  Little       1.2& 

Mainly  Mother  Goose.    Contains  also  a  few  favorite  poems. 
398.8  (1-2) 

Varney,  M.  T.    Robin  reader;  a  first  reader.  Scribner        .64 

Stories,  songs  and  poems.    Illustrations  in  color. 
372.4  (1-3) 

Wiltse,  S.  E.    Folklore  stories  and  proverbs  gathered  and  para- 
phrased for  little  children.  Ginn         .GO 
One  of  the  best  collections  for  children  just  learning  to  read. 
398.3         (1-2) 

Winston  "Elasy-to-read"  story  books.  Winston,    ea.        .7R 

Mother  Goose.  Golden  Black  Bird. 

Little  red  hen.  Gingerbread  boy. 

Peter  Rabbit. 

Stories  told  in  simple  language  with  the  illustrations  as  the  main,  feature. 
398.8  (1-3) 


RELIGION,  ETHICS  AND  CONDUCT  5 

RELIGION. 

Bible.    Bible  for  young  people.  Century      3.50 

Selections  from  King  James  version,  without  verse  division. 

220  (5-8) 

Bible.     Bible  stories    (New   Testament,    Old   Testament) ;    ed.    by 

R.  G.  Moulton.  Macmillan.  ea.        .90 

A  selection  of  the  most  popular  stories  from  the  revised  version.     Two 

small  books  liked  by  children. 

2'20  (3-6)  ^,.J 

Bible.    Bible  stories  to  read  and  tell,  by  F.  J.  Olcott.     Houghton       ^M 

Stories  of  the  Old  Testament  told  in  Bible  language. 

221  (1-2) 

Bible.    Modern  reader's  Bible  for  schools;  the  New  Testament,  ed. 

by  R.  G.  Moulton.  Macmillan       2.25 

225          (5-8) 
Bible.     Stories  for  the  Bible  hour,  by  R.  B.  Johnson.  Dodd      1.50 

221         (4-6) 
Bible.      Truly   stories    from    the    surely    Bible,    ed.    by    Margaret 

Howard.  Lothrop       1.50 

Fifty-two  Old  Testament  stories,  not  rewritten. 

221  (4-7) 

Bible.     Old   Testament.     An   old,   old   story   book,    ed.   by  E.    M. 

Tappan.  Houghton       2.50 

221         (5-7) 
Bunyan,    John.      Pilgrim's    progress;    illus.    by    Rhead    brothers. 

Century      3.00., 

Fiction         (6-8) 
Bunyan,    John.     Pilgrim's    progress.      (Riverside    literature    ser.) 

Houghton         .56 

Fiction         (6-8) 
Guerber,  H.  A.     Story  of  the  chosen  people.    (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Consecutive   story   of   the  Jews,   written   in   simple   style. 

933  (6-7) 

Hodges,   George.     When  the  King  came;    stories   from  the  four 

Gospels.  Houghton       1.90 

The  life   of  Christ  told  in  a   simple  way  with  much   of  the  dignity 
and  richness  of  the  Bible  narrative.     The  oriental  atmosphere  has  been 
kept  to  an  unusual  degree. 
232         (5-6) 

ETHICS  AND  CONDUCT. 

Braddy,    Nella,    ed.      Young    folks'    encyclopaedia    of    etiquette. 

Doubleday       1.50 
Just  the  book  young  folks  will  appreciate.    Gives  correct  behavior  for  all 
occasions  and  contains  suggestions   for  indoor  and  outdoor  games   and 
entertainments. 
395  (7-8) 

Dewey,  J.  M.     Lessons  on  manners.  Hinds       1.00 

A  simple,  sensible  book  on  behavior. 
395  (5-7) 

Forbush,  W.  B.    Young  folks'  book  of  ideals.  Lothrop       2.50 

Talks,  stories  and  practical  advice  about  the  afifairs  of  the  body,  mind 
and  soul. — ^A.  L.  A. 
177  (7-8) 

Griffin,  C.  S.    Young  folks'  book  of  etiquette.  Flanagan        .50 

395         (6-8) 
*Hall,  Mrs.  F.  H.     Manners  for  boys  and  girls.  Page      1.75 

A  book  of  much-needed   information   which   will   prove   pleasant   and 

profitable  to  boys  and  girls. 

395  (5-8) 


Q  MYTHOLOGY 

Pritchard,  M.  T.  and  Turkington,  G.  A.    Stories  of  thrift  for  young 

Americans,     (school  ed.)  Scribner        .7^ 

Short   stories,   which   aim   to   teach   thrift   of   time,    money,   body   and 
brain. — A.  L.  A. 
179.9  (5-8) 

Starrett,   Mrs.   H.  E.     Charm  of  fine  manners.  Lippincott       l.OO 

About   behavior,   manners,    self-control,   self   culture,    personal   habits, 
society,  conversation.     Girls  will  enjoy  every  page  of  it. 
395         (6-8) 

MYTHOLOGY. 

Baldwin,  Jannes.    Golden  fleece,  more  old  Greek  stories.  (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Thirty-three   stories  gathered  from  the   classics   and  retold  in  simple 
language. — A.   L.    A. 
292  (5-6) 

Baldwin,  Jannes.    Old  Greek  stories.     (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.         .60^ 
Stories  from  mythology  told  in  simple  language  as  hero  stories,  not 
as  stories  of  gods,  and  with  no  attempt  at  analysis  or  explanation. 
292  (4-5) 

Bradish,  S.  P.     Old  Norse  stories.  Amer.  Bk.        .60 

Myths  and  folk  stories. 
2f93         (3-6)  ^^ 

Brooks,  Edward.    Story  of  the  Aeneid.  Penn.       1.75 

A  delightful  rendering  of  the  story  for  older  children  to  read  for  them- 
selves. 

873  (7-8) 

Brooks,  Edward.     Story  of  the  Iliad.  Penn       1.75 

Told  so  as  to  arouse  the  interest  of  young  people. 
883  (7-8) 

Brooks,  Edward.     Story  of  the  Odyssey.  Penn       1.75 

Useful  and  interesting  adaptation  of  the  adventures  of  Ulysses. 
883  (7-8) 

Burt,  M.  E.,  and   Ragozin,  Z.  A.     Herakles,  the  hero  of  Thebes. 

Scribner         .72 
The    story   of    the    twelve    labors    of   Herakles,    also    the    exploits    of 
Theseus,  Jason  and  Perseus. — ^Pittsburgh. 
292  (4-6) 

Burt,   M.  E.,  and    Ragozih,  Z.  A.     Odysseus,   the  hero  of  Ithaca. 

Scribner         .84 
Adheres  more  nearly  than  others  to  the  original. 
883          (4-6) 

Carpenter,  E.  J.    Hellenic  tales;  a  book  of  golden  hours  with  old 

story  tellers.  Little         .90 

292  (6-8) 

Church,  A.  J.    Aeneid  for  boys  and  girls,     (new  ed.)     Macmillan       1.75 
Simple  and  dignified  version   of  the   Aeneid.     Excellent  illustrations. 

—A.   L.   A. 
873         (7-8) 

Church,  A.  J.     Iliad  for  boys  and  girls.  Macmillan       1.75 

883         (5-6) 

Church,  A.  J.    Odyssey  for  boys  and  girls.  Macmillan       1.75 

Attractively  bound,  well  printed  and  illustrated  with  delicately  colored 
halftones. 
883  (5-6) 

Colum,  Padriac.    Children  of  Odin.  Macmillan       2.00 

The  sagas  of  the  Norse  land  so  simply  retold  that  children  will  find 
it  easy  to  grasp  their  beauty  and  power. 

293  (5-8) 


MYTHOLOGY  7 

♦Colum,    Padriac.     Children's    Homer;    illus.    by    Willy    Pogany. 

Macmillan       2.00 
School  ed.       l.ZO 
A  very  beautiful  book. 
883  (5-8) 

Foster,  M.  H.,  and  Cummings,  M.  H.    Asgard  stories;  tales  from 

Norse  mythology.  Silver         .72 

Ten  stories  written  simply  and  well  illustrated. 
293  (3-4) 

Francillon,  R.  E.     Gods  and  heroes;   or  The  Kingdom  of  Jupiter. 

Ginn         .68 
Covers  the  wliole  field  in  one  continuous  story. — Wisconsin. 
292  (4-5) 

Hall,  Jennie.     Four  old  Greeks.  Rand        .65 

A    free    rendering    of    the    stories    of    Achilles,    Herakles,    Dionysius 
and  Alkestis. 
292  (4-5) 

Hawthorne,  Nathaniel.     Tanglewood  tales.      (Riverside  literature 

ser.)  Houghton         .56 

292  (4-5) 

Hawthorne,  Nathaniel.    Wonder  book.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton         .56 
Popular  ed.       1.65 
292         (4-6) 
Holbrook,  Florence.     Round  the  year  in  myth  and  song. 

Amer.  Bk.         ^76 
Myths  and  poems  of  the  seasons,  with  the  origin  and  meaning  of  names 
of  the  months,  days  of  the  weeks  and  holidays. 
292  (3-4) 

Hyde,  L.  S.    Favorite  Greek  myths.  Heath       1.04 

One  of  the  best  versions  for  higher  grades,   especially  good  for  the 
Hercules  story. — Oregon. 

292  (5-8) 

Jatakas.     Jataka   tales,    retold   by   E.    C.   Babbitt,      (school    ed.) 

Century         .65 
These  tales,  chiefly  about  animals,  form  one  of  the  sacred  books  of 
the   Buddhists.     In   many,   kindness   to   animals   is   the   favorite   theme. 
Illustrated  with  delightful  silhouettes. 
398.9  (3-4) 

Keary,  Annie  and   Eliza.     Heroes  of  Asgard;   tales  from  Scandi- 
navian mythology;  rev.  and  abridg.  Macmillan        .48 

293  (4-5) 

Lamb,  Charles.     Adventures  of  Ulysses.  Heath         .64 

Well  told  and  absorbing  in  interest. 
883  (6-8) 

Lang,  Andrew.    Tales  of  Troy  and  Greece.  Longmans       1.50 

Adventures  of  Greek  heroes  with  the  atmosphere  of  the  Homeric  age. 
292  (7-8) 

*Mabie,  H.  W.    Myths  that  every  child  should  know.  Grosset       1.00 

Selections  of  the  classic  myths  of  all  times. 

292  (5-6) 

Mabie,  H.  W.    Norse  stories;  retold  from  the  Eddas.  Rand         .80 

The  best  version  for  older  children. 

293  (5-7) 

McFee,  Inez.     Treasury  of  myths.  Crowell         .75 

Children  will  love  to  read  these  old  stories  so  simply  told,  of  Thor  and 
his  wonderful  hammer,  Balder  the  beautiful,  Phaeton,  Apollo,  Prometheus, 
Persephone,  King  Admetus,  Arachne,  Cadmus  and  Europa. 
292  (4-6) 

Palmer,  G.  H.     Story  of  the  Odyssey.  Houghton       1.08 

883         (6-7) 


8  FABLES,  STORIES  OF  FANCY,  IMAGINATION 

Peabody,  J.  P.    Old  Greek  folk  stories  told  anew.  Houghton        .48 

Tells  the  stories  omitted  from  Hawthorne's  "Wonder  book"  and  "Tangle - 
wood    tales."      No    illustrations.      Pronouncing    index    of    mythology. 

— Oregdn. 
292  (4-6) 

Price,  L.  L.  and  Gilbert,  C.  B.    Heroes  of  myth.  (Stories  of  heroes.) 

Silver         .80 
Tells   of   Eg3rptian,    Chinese,   Indian,   Japanese,    Greek,    Scandinavian, 
German  and  Russian  mythical  heroes. — N.  Y. 
292  (5-6) 

*St.   Nicholas   Magazine.     Stories   of   classic  myths,   retold   from 

St.  Nicholas.  Century       1.25 

292         (5-6) 

Seachrest,   Effie.     Greek  photoplays.  Rand         .90 

Greek  myths  told  simply   and   illustrated  with   photographs   of   child- 
ren in  Greek  costume  presenting  the  stories. 
292  (4-6) 

FABLES. 

Aesop.     Aesop  for  children,  by  Milo  Winter.  Rand       2.50 

Large  type.    Most  attractive  edition  with  beautiful  pictures  in  color. 
398.91  (1-2) 

Aesop.    Aesop's  fables  in  words  of  one  syllable,  by  Mary  Godolp- 

hin.  Burt         .75 

398.91         (2-4) 

Aesop.  Child's  version  of  Aesop,  with  a  supplement  containing 
fables  from  LaFontaine  and  Grilof.  (Home  and  school 
library)  Ginn         .60 

A  reader  for  children  eight  or  nine  years  of  age — Oregon. 
398.91  (3-4) 

Aesop.  Hundred  fables  of  Aesop,  from  the  English  version  by 
Sir  Roger  L'Estrange,  with  an  introduction  by  Kenneth 
Grahame.  Lane       2.00 

Many  pictures  by  Percy  J.  Billinghurst. 
398.91  (4-5) 

*Scuddep,   H.  E.     Book  of  fables.  Houghton        .44 

398.9  (3-5) 

Stafford,  A.  O.    Animal  fables  from  the  dark  continent    (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

398.9         (2-4) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.  and  Smith,  N.  A.,  eds.     Talking  beasts;  a  book  of 

fable   wisdom.  Doubleday       1.75 

Selections  from  Aesop  and  other  fable  writers. 
398.9  (3-5) 

STORIES  OF  FANCY  AND   IMAGINATION 

Andersen,  H.  C.    Fairy  tales;  tr.  by  Mrs.  E.  C.  Lucas;  illus.  by  E. 

P.  Abbott.  Jacobs       1.75 

Good  cheap  edition.    Contains  33  of  the  more  notable  stories. — N.  Y. 
398  (4-5) 

Andersen,   H.  C.     Stories,  with  a  sketch  of  the  author's  life  by 

H.  E.  Scudder.     (Riverside  literature  ser.)  Houghton         .56 

Nineteen  of  the  best  stories.    No  illustrations.    This  is  probably  the 
best  Inexpensive  edition.— Oregon. 
398  (3-5) 

Andersen,  H.  C.    Tales  from  Hams  Andersen.    (Children's  classics 

f,'?>       .        ,  Lippincott        .75 

Illustrations  in  color  and  black  and  ^rhite. 
398         (5-6) 


STORIES  OF  FANCY  AND  IMAGINATION  ^ 

Arabian  Nights.     Stories  from  Arabian  nights.    (Riverside  litera- 
ture ser.)  Houghton         .56, 
It  Is  important  to  select  a  cleanly  edition  of  these  famous  tales. — Oregon, 
398.4          (4-5) 

Arabian  nights  entertainment;  ed.  by  Andrew  Lang.    (Lang  fairy 

book  ser.)  Longmans       1.75 

"I  hope  children  who  read  them,  with  Mr.  Ford's  pictures  will  be  as 
happy  as  I  was  when  In  the  company  of  Aladdin  and  Sinbad  the  sailor." 
398.4  (6-7) 

^Baldwin,  James.     Another  fairy  reader.  Amer.   Bk.         .52 

Entertaining   stories   printed   and   illustrated   in   a   manner   to   attract 
children. 
398.4  (2-3) 

♦Baldwin,  James.    Fairy  reader,  adapted  from  Grimm  and  Ander- 
sen. Amer.  Bk.         .52 
Very  simple  adaptations. 
398.4          (2-3) 

Baldwin,  James.    Fairy  stories  and  fables.  Amer.  Bk.         .56\ 

An  excellent  collection,  perhaps  slightly  simpler  in  form  than  Scudder's. 

Prentice  and  Power. 
398.4         (2-3) 

Baldwin,  James.    Wonder  book  of  horses.  Century      1.35 

Eighteen  stories  of  winged  steeds  and  war  horses  of  knight  errants 
and  heroes. 
398.2          (5-6) 

Barrie,  J.  M.     Peter  Pan.     (school  ed.)  Silver         .92 

Retold  from  the  famous  play  and  retaining  the  charm  of  the  original. 
Many  illustrations. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

BIgham,  M.  A.     Fanciful  flower  tales,     (school  ed.)  Little       ".80, 

"The  kindergarten  children  to  whom  these  were  first  told  called  them 
the  Peter  Pan  tales." 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Bigham,  M.  A.    Merry  animal  tales;   a  book  of  old  fables  in  new 

dress,     (school  ed.)  Little         .80 ^ 

398.9  (3-4) 

Browne,  Frances.     Wonderful  chair  and  the  tales  it  told.  ed.  by 

M.  V.  O'Shea.  Heath         .76 

Old    fashioned    moral    fairy    tales    which    have    considerable    fancy. 

Popular  with  children. — Cleveland. 

Fiction         (4-5) 

Burnett,  F.  H.    Racketty-packetty  house,  as  told  by  Queen  Cross- 
patch.  Century       1.00 
Tiny  edition  of  a  popular  story  about  dolls,  illustrated  in  color. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Carroll,  Lewis,  pseud.     Alice's  adventures  in  wonderland. 

Amer.  Bk.         .7? 
Alice  is  nonsense  pure  and  simple  and  delightful.    It  cannot  be  inter- 
preted; it  has  no  moral. — Prentice  and  Power. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Carroll,    Lewis,    pseud.     Alice's    adventures    in    wonderland,    and 

Through   the   looking-glass.  Macmillan       2.25 

A  new  edition  of  the  famous  book  and  its  sequel,  with  the  original 
illustrations  of  John  Tenniel. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Collodi,  C.    Adventures  of  Pinnochio.  Ginn         .64 

Story  of  a  wooden  marionette  who  meets  with  many  adventures. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Cruikshank,  George,  ed.    Cruikshank  fairy  book.  Putnam       2.00> 

Contents :  Puss  in  boots — History  of  Jack  and  the  bean  stalk — Hop-o'- 
my-thumb — The  seven-league  boots — Cinderella. 
398.4  (2-3) 


IQ  STORIES  OF  FANCY  AND  IMAGINATION 

De   Musset,    P.    E.     Mr.   Wind  and   Madam   Rain;    tr,   by   Emily 

Makepeace.      (Harper's  young  people's   ser.)  Harper        .90 

Fiction         (5-6) 

4   *Grimm,  J.    L   and   W.   K.  German   household   tales.      (Riverside 

literature  ser.)  Houghton         .56 

Excellent  edition  of  these  famous  fairy  stories  for  a  reading  book  for 
children. — Oregon. 
398.4         (3-5) 

Kingsley,  Charles.    Water  babies.      (Home   and   school   library.) 

Ginn         .64 
The  adventures   of  Tom  in  the   deep  sea   are   of  the   most   exquisite 
interest  to  land  babies. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Kipling,   Rudyard.     Puck  of  Pook's  Hill.  Doubleday       2.00 

Puck  opens  a  magic  door  to  two  English  children  and  leads  them  into 
adventures  In  the  land  of  the  past. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Lagerlof,  Selma.    Wonderful  adventures  of  Nils.  Doubleday       1.90 

Story  of  a  boy  vfho  was  changed  to  an  elf  among  the  wild  geese. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Lang,  Andrew,  ed.     Aladdin  and  the  wonderful  lamp,  and  other 

stories  from  the  fairy  books.  Longmans       1.10 

398.4         (4-5) 

Lang,   Andrew,  ed.    Aladdin  and  the  wonderful  lamp.      (Mother 

Goose  ser.)  Burt         .75 

398.4         (3-5) 

Lang,  Andrew,  ed.     Blue  fairy  book.     2  vol.  Longmans 

A  new  edition  of  one  of  the  famous  Lang  fairy  books  in  more  readable 
print. 
398.4  (5-7) 

Lang,  Andrew,  ed.    Pretty  Goldilocks  and  other  stories. 

Longmans         .90 
398.4         (4-6) 
Lansing,  M.  F.,  comp.    Fairy  tales.     2  vol.     (Open  road  library.) 

Ginn         .64 
398.4         (3-4) 
Mabie,  H.  W.,  ed.     Fairy  tales  every  child  should  know;   a  selec- 
tion of  the  best  fairy  tales  of  all  time  and  of  all  authors. 

Grosset       1.00 
398.4          (4-6) 

Macdonald,  George.    Princess  and  the  goblin.     (Children's  classics 

ser.)  Lippincott        .75 

Fiction         (4-5) 

Mace,  Jean.     Fairy  book.  Harper       1.50 

Old  fashioned  fairy  tales  from  the  French. 
398  (4-5) 

McFee,   Inez.     Treasury  of  flower  stories.  Crowell         .75 

One  part  fact  and  three  parts  fancy,  and  altogether  a  delightful  book 
for  any  child  who   loves  flowers. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

J\flaeterlinck,     Maurice.    Blue     bird     for     children;     adapted     by 

Madame  Maeterlinck.  Silver         .92 

An  attractive  companion  volume  to  the  adaptation  of  Barrie's   "Peter 
Pan." 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Mulook,  D.  M.     Little  lame  prince.  Heath         .64 

The  beautiful  story  of  little  Prince  Dolor  and  the  wonderful  traveling 
cloak. 
Fiction         (4-R) 


FOLK  LORE  AND  LEGEND  H 

Mulock,  D.  M.    Adventures  of  a  brownie.  Harper        .90 

Fiction          (4-5) 

Olcott,  H.  M.     Children's  fairyland.  Holt       1.75 

Madame    Aulnoy's    tales,    shortened    and    illustrated    with    silhouettes. 
Attractive    form. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

*0'Shea,  M.  V.  ed.     Six  nursery  classics.  Heath        .56 

398.4          (3-4) 

Pyle,  Katherine,     Mother's  nursery  tales.  Dutton      3.00 

Old   favorite   fairy   tales   with   some   of   the   harsher   details   softened 
and  eliminated. 
398.4  (5-6) 

Ruskin,  John.     King  of  the  Grolden  river.  Page         .90 

A  child's  story  by  one  of  the  best  literary  masters. 
Fiction         (3-5) 

St.   Nicholas   magazine.     Fairy   tales,   retold   from    St.    Nicholas. 

Century      1.25 
Modern  fairy  tales  and  folk  lore  by  Mary  Mapes  Dodge,  John  Kendrick 
Bangs,  Tudor  Jenks  and  others. 
Fiction         (3-5) 

Stockton,  F.  R.    Fanciful  tales.  Scribner         .72 

"The  Clocks  of  Rondaine"  and  other  stories,  told  with  delicate  fancy 
and  quiet  humor. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Tappan,  E.  M.,  ed.     Golden  goose  and  other  fairy  tales;   tr.  from 

the  Swedish.  Houghton       1.50 

398.4         (4-5) 

Thackeray,  W.  M.     Rose  and  the  ring,  abridged  by  Amy  Steed- 
man.     (Told  to  the  children  ser.)  Dutton       1.00 
A  pretty  edition  in  miniature  form. 
Fiction          (7-8) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Smith,  N.  A.    Fairy  ring.  Doubleday       1.75 

398  (3-4) 

Wiggin,   K.  D.,  and  Smith,   N.  A.     Maggie  casements.     Doubleday       1.75 

Fiction  (3-4) 
Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Smith,  N.  A.     Tales  of  laughter.     Doubleday       1.75, 

Fiction          (3-6) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Smith,  N.  A.     Tales  of  wonder.         Doubleday       1.75 
A  series  of  attractive  fairy  books  with  new  and  old  tales. 
Fiction         (3-6) 

Williston,  T.   P.     Japanese  fairy  tales.  Rand         .75 

Brief  folk  stories  with  an  ethical  and  poetic  value.     Illustrated  by  a 
Japanese  artist  with  grotesque,  brightly  colored  pictures. — Cleveland. 
398.4  (4-5) 

FOLK    LORE   AND    LEGEND. 

Baldwin,  James.     Hero   tales   told   in   school.      (School   reading.) 

Scribner         .80 
398.2  (5-6) 

Brooks,  Edward.     Story  of  Siegfried.  Penn       1.75 

398.2  (6-8) 

Chap  in,  A.  A.     Story  of  the  Rhinegold.  Harper       1.75 

782.3  (7-8) 

Chap  in,  A.  A.    Wonder  tales  from  Wagner.  Harper       1.75 

782.3  (7-8) 
Crommelin,  E.  G.    Famous  legends  adapted  for  children.    Century        .85 

398.2  (5-6) 


12  FOLK  LORE  AND  LEGEND 

;    Cutler,  U.  W.     Stories  of  King  Arthur  and  his  knights.     Crowell       1.35 
398.25  (6-8) 

Davis,  M.  H.  and  Chow- Leung.     Chinese  fables  and  folk  stories. 

Amer.  Bk. 
398         (4-5) 

Greene,  F.  H.     Legends  of  King  Arthur  and  his  court.  Ginn 

398.25,         (4-5) 

Hall,  Jennie.     Viking  tales.  Rand 

Icelandic  sagas:  stories  of  kings,  battles,  and  of  the  sea. — Oregon. 
839.6         (3-4) 

Harris,  J.  C.     Uncle  Remus:    his  songs  and  sayings;    illustrated 

by  Frost.  Appleton       2.50 

Fiction         (5-8) 

♦Harris,  J.  C.    Uncle  Remus  and  the  little  boy.  Small       1.25 

The  folk  lore  of  the  Southern  darky,  humorously  set  forth  in  delight- 
ful stories   in  the  negro  dialect. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Hoi  brook,  Florence.    Northland  heroes.  Houghton         .56 

The  stories  of  Fridthjof  and  Beowulf.    For  school  reading. — Oregcn. 

398.3  (3-4) 

Irving,  Washington.    Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow;  illus.  in  full  color 

by  A.  I.  Keller.  Bobbs       2.00 

398.2'         (8) 
Irving,    Washington.      Rip   Van   "Winkle;    illus.    by    C.    Robinson. 

(Stories  we  love.)  Stokes       1.00 

These  stories  are  piu-ely  imaginative,  but  are  little  read  by  children 

if  classed  with  literature. 

398.2  (8) 

Lanier,  Sidney,  ed.     Boys'  King  Arthur;    illus.   by  N.   C.  Wyeth. 

Scribner       3.50 
A  beautiful  edition  of  the  adaptation  by  the  famous  Southern  poet. 
398.25  (6-7) 

Lansing,    M.    F.     Life   in   the   greenwood,      (Open  road   library.) 

Ginn         .64 
Stories  of  Robin  Hood  and  other  famous  outlaws.    For  younger  readers 
than   Pyle   and   Tappan. — A.    L.   A. 
398.2  (4-6) 

Lansing,   M.   F.     Page,   esquire  and  knight;    a  book  of  chivalry. 

(Open   road   library.)  Ginn         .64 

Contents :  Tales  of  King  Arthur's  court — Tales  of  Charlemagne  and  his 
peers — The   order   of   St.    George — Godfrey,    a    knight   of   the    crusades — 
Chevalier  Bayard — Songs  of  chivalry. 
398.2  (4-6) 

Lansing,  M.  F.     Tales  of  old  England  in  prose  and  verse.   (Open 

road  library.)  Ginn         .64 

Fourteen  well-told  folk  tales. — ^A.   L.   A. 
398.2  (3-4) 

•     *Mabie,  H.  W.,  ed.    Legends  that  every  child  should  know,  a  selec- 
tion  of   the   great   legends    of   all   times   for   young   people. 

Grosset       1.00 
398.2         (6-8) 
MacLeod,   Mary.     Book  of  ballad   stories,   with   introduction   by 

Edward  Dowden.  Stokes       2.50 

398.21         (5-7) 

MacLeod,   Mary.     Book  of  King  Arthur  and  his  noble  knights. 

Stokes       Z,50 
Children  will  greatly  enjoy  this  edition. 
398.25         (7-8) 


PATRIOTISM  AND   CITIZENSHIP  13 

McSpadden,  J.  W.     Stories  from  Wagner.      (Children's   favorite 

classics.)  Crowell      2.00 

782.3  (5-7) 

Maitland,  Louise.    Heroes  of  chivalry.     (Stories  of  heroes.)     Silver         .92 
398.2          (4-6) 

Malory,  Sir  Thomas.     King  Arthur  stories  from  Malory,  by  L.  O. 
Stevens  and  E.  P.  Allen.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton         .56 
398.25          (5-6) 

*Pyle,  Howard.    Some  merry  adventures  of  Robin  Hood.   Scribner         .76 
Excellent  abridgment  of  his  larger  edition. 
398.2  (6-7) 

*Radford,  M.  L.     comp.     King  Arthur  and  his  knights.  Rand       1.25 

398.25  (5-7) 

Scudder,   H.  E.,  ed.     Book  of  fables  and  folk  stories.     Houghton         .80 
398.9  (3-5) 

♦Scudder,  H.  E.    Book  of  legends.  Houghton         .44 

398.2  (4-5) 

Skinner,  E.  L.     Tales  and  plays  of  Robin  Hood.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

398.2  (5-7) 

j    *Skinner,    E.    L.,   and    A.    M.,   comps.     Nursery   tales    from   many 
I  lands,     (school  ed.)  Scribner         .72 

Humorous  folk  tales,  with  black  and  white  illustrations.— Cleveland. 

398.3  (2-4) 

Stanley,  A.  A.    Animal  folk  tales.  Amer.  Bk.         .72f 

The   stories   are   from  various   countries — India,   Africa,   Japan,    China, 
the  Philippines,  Norway,  American  Indians,  and  are  well  told. — Wisconsin. 
I  398.3  (2-6) 

♦Thorne-Thomsen,     East  o*  the  sun  and  west  o'  the  moon,  with 
I  other  Norwegian  folk  tales.  Row         .60 

!  398.3          (3-5) 

PATRIOTISM  AND  CITIZENSHIP. 

Austin,  O.  P.    Uncle  Sam's  secrets;  a  story  of  national  affairs  for 
the  youth  of  all  the  nation.     (Home  reading  books.) 

Appleton       1.20 
Popular  with  boys. 
353  (5-6) 

Austin,   O.   P.     Uncle   Sam's  soldiers;    a  story   of   the  war   with 

Spain.   (Home  reading  books.)  Appleton       1.20 

For  the  boys  who  want  to  learn  about  army  life  and  modern  military 
methods  in  general. 
355  (5-6) 

Boardman,  M.  T.    Under  the  Red  Cross  flag  at  home  and  abroad. 

Lippincott       1.75 
The    story    of    the    Red    Cross,    its    history    and    accomplishments    in 
peace  and  iu  war. 
361  (6-8) 

Codd,  M.  J.    On  board  a  United  States  battleship,  or  With  Evans 

to  the  Pacific.  Flanagan        .80 

Graphic    and    entertaining   account   of   life    on   board   the    fleet   from 
Hampton  Roads  to  San  rrancisco. — ^Wisconsin. 
359  (6-8) 

Crump,  Irving.    Boys'  book  of  firemen.  Dodd       1.65 

614.84         (6-8) 


14  PATRIOTISM  AND  CITIZENSHIP 

Crump,  Irving.     Boys'  book  of  mounted  police.  Dodd       1.66 

Thrilling  stories  of  the  work  of  the  mounted   police,  the  New  York 
"grey  coats,"  the  Pennsylvania  "blues,"  the  Texas  rangers,   the  Indian 
police,  etc. 
351.74         (6-8) 

Dole,  C.  F.     Young  citizen.  Heath         .76 

A  very   simple   explanation   of   the    form   of   our  government   and   of 
the  duties  of  good  citizenship. 
353  (5-8) 

Downes,  A.  M.     Fire  fighters  and  their  pets.  Harper       1.75 

614.84         (6-8) 
DuPuy,  W.  A.     Uncle  Sam,  detective.  Stokes       1.75 

Interesting  account  of  the  government's  method  of  capturing  smugglers, 

counterfeiters,  etc.   in  fiction  form. 

353  (7-8) 

DuPuy,  W.  A.     Uncle  Sam  wonder  worker.  Stokes       1.75 

Stories  of  what  Uncle  Sam  is  doing  in  the  way  of  invention  and  dis- 
covery. 
353  (7-8) 

DuPuy,  W.  A.    Uncle  Sam's  modern  miracles.  Stokes       1.75 

The  big  job  of  the  Federal  government  told  in  picturesque  language. 
Illustrated  with  photographs. 
353  (6-8) 

Evans,  F.  E.,  and  Jackson,  O.  P.    Marvel  book  of  American  ships. 

Stokes       3.50 
Facts  about  the  building  of  various  kinds  of  ships,   and   of   life   in 
our  navy. 

923.8  (5-8) 

Fraser,  C.  C.     Young  citizen's  own  book.  Crowell       1.60 

Differs  from  other  books  on  this  subject  in  that  it  is  not  a  textbook, 
but  is  meant  to  be  read  for  pleasure  as  well  as  information. — Bkl. 
353  (6-8) 

Holden,    E.   S.     Our   country's    flag.      (Appleton's    home   reading 

books.)  Appleton       1.20 

The  history  of  the  American  flag,  with  considerable  information  about 
the  flags  of  other  nations. 

929.9  (6-8) 

Hoxie,   C.    D.     How  the   people  rule;    civics   for  boys  and   girls. 

Silver         .88 
Shows   importance   of  law   and  government   and   explains   U.    S.    local 
and  national  systems.     Emphasizes  personal  responsibility. 
353  (7-8) 

♦Hyde,  M.  K.     Girls  book  of  the  Red  Cross.  Crowell      1.75 

Childs  story  of  the  Red  Cross  movement. 
361  (5-7) 

James,  Harlean.     Building  of  cities.  Macmillan        .80 

Tells  our  future  citizens  what  they  may  do  to  help  improve  their  cities. 
353  (6-7) 

Marriott,  C.    Uncle  Sam's  business.  Harper       1.35 

In  spite  of  literary  faults,  this  work  is  valuable  in  containing  infor- 
mation not  found  in  other  similar  books. 
353  (7-8) 

♦Parsons,  Goeffrey.     Land  of  Fair-play,     (school  ed.)         Scribner       1.12 
The  organization  of  the  American  government  is  compared  with  that  of 
a  baseball  game. 
353  (6-8) 

Price,  O.  W.    Land  we  live  in.  Small      1.75 

Our  natural  resources,  their  use  and  protection. 
351  (7-8) 

Reinsch,  P.  S.    Civil  government.  Sanborn        .80 

Admirable  in  spirit  and  style  and  attractive  In  illustration  and  make- 
up.— ^A.   L.  A. 
353         (7-8) 


Nuova  be  dan  to  clean  his  windr*^ 


■■e> 


& 


From  "NuovA,  the  New  Bee,"  by  Vernon  Kellogg 

Published  by 

HOUGHTON  MIFFLIN  COMPANY 


NATURE  AND  SCIENCE  15 

Reinsch,  P.  S.    Young  citizen's  reader.  Sanborn       1.12 

Very  readable. 
353  (6-8) 

RicKman,  P.  S.,  and  Wallach,  I.  R.     Good  citizenship.     Amer.  Bk.         .64 
Presents  both  the  useful  and  picturesque  side  of  the  work  of  a  city's 
fire,    police   and   street- cleaning  departments,    and   shows   children   their 
personal  obligations  as  little  citizens. — N.   Y. 
353  (5-7) 

Rolt- Wheeler,  Francis.  (United  States  service  series.)  Profusely 
illustrated  from  photographs  taken  in  work  for  the  U.  S. 
government.  Lothrop       ].75i 

Boy  with  the  U.  S.  census. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  explorers. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  fisheries. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  foresters. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S,  Indians. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  inventors. 
Boy  with   the  U.   S.   life-savers. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  mail. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  naturalists. 

Boy  with  the  U.  S.  survey.  ,    j 

Boy  with  the  U.  S.  trappers. 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  weather  man. 

Information  about  the  government  departments  told  in  story  form. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Tappan,  E.  M.     Little  book  of  the  flag,     (school  ed.)     Houghton        .72^ 

A  good  book  for  the  observance  of  Flag  day. 

929.9  (7-8) 

Waldo,  L.  M.     Safety  first  for  little  folks.  Scribner         .64 

A  little  book  In  full  accord  with  the   times  in  teaching  carefulness, 

thougihtfulness   and  consideration  for  others. 

351.75  (2-4) 

NATURE  AND  SCIENCE. 

Andrews,  Jane.    Stories  Mother  Nature  told  her  children,     (school 

ed.)  Ginn         .64 

Partial  contents :  Story  of  the  amber  beads.  The  talk  of  the  trees.  How 
the  Indian  corn  grows.  Water  lilies,  etc. 
570.4  (3-4) 

Andrews,  Jane.     Stories  of  my  four  friends.  Ginn         .60 

Simple  sketches  and  stories  of  the  four  seasons. 

570.4  (3-4) 

Burroughs,  John.    Wit  of  a  duck.  Houghton        .48 

Short  nature  stories  children  will  enjoy. 

591.5  (4-6) 

Burt,    M.    E.     Little  nature   studies   for   little   people;    from   the 

essays  of  John  Burroughs.     2  vol.  Ginn     ea.         .52 

Stories  of  animals  and  plants. 
591.5          (1-3) 

Fabre,  J.  H.    Secret  of  everyday  things.  Century      2.50 

Tells   about    flax,    hemp,    fire,    matches,    coal,    bread,    rain,    ijnow,    and 
many  other  things  in  a  way  a  child  can  understand.    The  information  is 
accurate  and   interesting. 
504  (6-8) 

*Fabre,  J.  H.    Story  book  of  science.  Century      2.50 

A  book  simple  enough  for  a  child  to  understand,  yet  suitable  for  adult 
reading. 
504  (6-8) 

Griel,  K.  A.    Glimpses  of  nature  for  little  folks.  Heath         .72 

About  flowers,   animals  and  birds.    Colored  pictures. 
591.5         (1-2) 


16  ASTRONOMY 

Hardy,  Mrs.  A.  C.     Sea  stories  for  wonder  eyes.  Ginn         .68 

All  about  the  ocean  and  the  strange  things  that  live  in  it,  the  shells, 
the  clams,  etc. — N.  Y. 
591.92  (3-4) 

Holden,  E.  S.     Real  things  in  nature;   a  reading  book  of  science 
for  American   boys   and    girls.      (Standard    school    library.) 

Macmillan       1.20 
The  topics  are  grouped  under  nine  general  heads :    Astronomy,  Physics, 
Meteorology,  Chemistry,  Geology,  Zoology,  Botany.     The  human  body  and 
The  early  history  of  mankind. — Oregon. 
504  (7-8) 

Morley,  M.  W.    Song  of  life.  McClurg      1.35 

The    principle    of   the    reproduction    of    life    in    animal    and    plant    world 
*^      told  simply  and  beautifully  for  little  children. — Wisconsin. 
570.4  (4-6) 

Moseley,  E.  L.    Trees,  stars  and  birds;  a  book  of  outdoor  science; 

stimulates  an  interest  in  nature  study.  World  Bk.       1.80 

581.97         (6-8) 
Smith,  D.  E.    Number  stories  of  long  ago.  Ginn         .60 

A  history  of  numbers,  including  tricks  and  odd  processes  of  deduction. 

511.2  (5-6) 

Speed,  James.    Jack  and  Nell  in  field  and  forest.  Publ.  School  pub.         .75 
Under  the  guidance  of  an  uncle  the  children  learn  many  of  nature's 
lessons. — Oregon. 

372.3  (3-5) 

Strong,  F.  L.    All  the  year  round;  nature  readers.    4  vol.   Ginn  ea.         .56 
A  volume  for  each  season. 

570.4  (3-4) 

■•  Van  Buskirk,  E.  F.,  and  Smith,   E.  L.     Science  of  everyday  life; 

project  for   Junior   high   schools.  Houghton       1.60 

Presents   information   about   a    large    number   of   physical   phenomena 
under  the  five  major  topics  of  air,  water,  food,  protection,  and  the  work 
of  the  world. 
372.3  (8) 

ASTRONOMY. 

Ball,  Sir  R.  S.     Star-land,     (school  ed.)  Ginn       1.40 

It  would  be  hard  to  find  a  pleasanter  road  to  astronomical  knowledge 
than  through  "Star-land." — ^Pittsburgh. 
523  (6-8) 

H olden,  E.  S.  Earth  and  sky;  a  primer  of  astronomy.  (Home  read- 
ing books.)  Appleton         .80 

A  poorly  bound  book,  but  one  that  is  adapted  to  the  xmderstanding  of 
children. — Oregon. 
523  (3-5) 

Martin,   Martha.     Friendly  stars.  Harper       1.75 

Popular  entertaining  description   of  the   brightest  stars. 
523  (7-8) 

Porter,  J.  G.    Stars  in  song  and  legend.  Ginn        .88 

Legends  connected  with  the  stars  and  constellations. 
523  (5-6) 

Proctor,  Mary.    Giant  Sun  and  his  family.  Silver        .84 

Accurate  and  interesting.    Intended  for  higher  grammar  grades. — ^A.  L.  A. 
523         (6-8) 

Proctor,  Mary.    Stories  of  star  land.  Silver        .80 

A  very  interesting  star  book  for  young  readers.     Facts,  legends,  poems, 
stories  and  pictures. 
523  (5-6) 

Schwartz,  J.  A.     Little  star  gazers.  Stokes       1.50 

Contents:  Useful  stars,  a  story  of  ancient  Egypt;  Beautiful  stars,  a 
story  of  classical  Greece;  Mysterious  stars,  a  story  of  the  renaissance  in 
Italy;  Amazing  stars,  a  story  of  modern  times. 
£23         (3-5) 


ELECTRICITY,  PHYSICS,  PHYSICAL  GEOGRAPHY,  GEOLOGY  17 

Serviss,  G.  P.    Astronomy  with  the  naked  eye.  Harper       2.00 

523          (6-8) 

Warner,  G.  C.     Star  stories  for  little  folks.  Pilgrim         .50 

Tales  of  the  two  dippers,  Taurus,  the  Bull  and  other  Important  con- 
stellations, as  told  to  little  Helen. 
52-3  (4-5) 

ELECTRICITY  AND  PHYSICS. 

Adams,  J.  H.    Harper's  electricity  book  for  boys.  Harper       1.60 

Clear  directions  for  manufacturing  everyday  electrical  appliances  with 
home-made  apparatus  at  small  cost. 
537.81  (5,-7) 

Massie,  W.  W.,  and  Underhili,  C.  R.    Wireless  telegraphy  and  tele- 
phone popularly  explained.  Van  Nostrand       1.00 
654.1         (7-8) 

Meadowcroft,  W.  H.    A  B  C  of  electricity.  Harper         .90 

Outlines  in  simple  language  the  principles  of  electricity  and  explains 
their  application  to  the  telegraphy,  telephone,   electric  light   and  motor 
power. — Wisconsin. 
537  (6-7) 

Morgan,  A.  P.    Boy  electrician.  Lothrop       2.50 

Very  complete. 
537  (7-8) 

Morgan,    A.    P.      Home-made    electrical    apparatus;    a    practical 

handbook  for  amateur  experimenters.         Cole  and   Morgan.       1.25 
537.81          (7-8) 

St.  John,  T.  M.     How  two  boys  made  their  own  electrical  appar- 
atus. St.  John       1.25 
537.81          (7-8) 

St.  John,  T.  M.    Things  a  boy  should  know  about  electricity. 

St.  John       1.25 
Should  be  used  in   connection   with  "How  two  boys  made   their  own 
electrical  apparatus." 
537.81  (7-8) 

♦Shafer,   D.  C.     Harper's  beginning  electricity.  Harper       1.35 

Simple  explanations  are  given  for  experiments  and  devices  which  every 
boy  will  love  to  make. 
537.81  (7-8) 

Sloane,    T.    W.      Electric    toy    making    for    amateurs,    including 
batteries,  magnets,  motors,  miscellaneous  toys,  dynamo  con- 
struction,  etc.  Henley       1.50 
537          (7-8) 

PHYSICAL  GEOGRAPHY  AND  GEOLOGY. 

Fairbanks,  H.  W.    Stories  of  rocks  and  minerals  for  the  grammar 

grades.  Educ.  Pub.       1.00 

Excellent    popular    work    for    interesting    children    in    earth    structure 
and  helping  to  identify  minerals. 
552  (7-8) 

*Fraser,  C.  C.     Secrets  of  the  earth.  Crowell       1.60 

Stories  of  coal,  iron,  copper,  gold,  silver,  diamonds,  lead,  graphite, 
limestone,  sand,  clay,  salt,  aluminum,  tungsten,  platinum,  radium,  mercury. 
551  (6-8) 

Greene,    Homer.     Coal  and   the  coal  mines.      (Riverside  library.) 

Houghton      1.10 

Discovery  of  coal,  its  introduction  into  general  use,  mining,  geological 
facts,  etc. 
622.33  (7-8) 


18  CHEMISTRY,  BOTANY  AND  FORESTRY 

Harrington,  M.  W.     About  the  weather.    (Home  reading-  books.) 

Appleton       1.20 
Explains  the  mysteries  of  winds,  clouds,  rain,  etc.  and  the  methods  and 
usefulness  of  weather  bureaus. 
551.5  (7-8) 

*Hawksworth,  Hallam.     Strange  adventures  of  a  pebble,     (school 

ed.)  Scribner       1.2'0 

True  stories  of  the   earth  told  in  chatty,   lively   style  with  excellent 
photographic  illustrations. 
552  (5-8) 

Houston,  E.  J.    Wonder  book  of  the  atmosphere.  Stokes       2,00 

About  winds  and  clouds,  storms,  climates,  etc. 
551.21  (7-8) 

Kelley,  J.  G.    Boy  mineral  collectors.  Lippincott       1.50 

Technical  terms  avoided;  contains  much  on  the  history  of  metals  and 
precious  stones. — ^A.   L.   A. 
549  (5-7) 

Rogers,  J.  E.     Earth  and  sky  every  child  should  know.     Grosset       1.00 
Clear   and   simple    explanations    of   the   world's   geographical   periods, 

the  principles  of  physiography,  and  a  few  brief  chapters  on  the   stars. 

— A.    L.    A. 

551  (7-8) 

Shaler,  N.  S.    First  book  in  geology.  Heath       1.25 

Simple,  interesting  introduction   to  geology. — Oregon. 

551  (7-8) 

Shaler,  N.  S.    Story  of  our  continent,     (school  ed.)  Ginn       1.48 

Elementary  geology   and  geography   of   North   America. 

917  (7-8) 

Thompson,  J.  H.    Water  wonders  every  child  should  know;  little 

studies  of  dew,  frost,  snow,  ice  and  rain.  Grosset       1.010 

Photographic  illustrations.    Very  interestingly  told. 

551.57  (7-8) 

^Jnited  States  Weather  bureau.     Forecasting  the  weather.     Bull. 

No.  42.  Supt.  of  Documents         .05 

Simple  and  untechnical  enough  for  the  average  inquirer.    Will  be  useful 
for  the  geography  teacher. 
55,1.5  (7-8) 

■Washburne,  C.  W.,  and  H.  C.    Story  of  the  earth.  Century         .72 

From  the  nebular  stage  to  primitive  man. 
551  (3-6) 

CHEMISTRY. 

Clarke,  C.  R.     Boys'  book  of  chemistry.  Dutton      2.00 

Excellent  introduction  to  chemistry. 
546  (6-8) 

.Jenks,  Tudor.     Chemistry  for  young  people.  Scribner       1.90 

Useful  for  boy  or  girl  already  interested  and  somewhat  informed. 

—A.  L.  A. 
546         (7-8) 

BOTANY,  FARMING  AND   FORESTRY. 

'Bailey,  L.  H.     First  lessons  with  plants.  Macmillan       1.80 

One  of  the  best  simple  books  on  botany. — Oregon. 
580.7          (5-8) 

iBrown,   K.  L.     Plant  baby  and  its  friends:    a  nature  reader  for 

primary  grades.  Silver         .80 

Simple  stories  and  poems  about  plant  life;  careful  as  to  scientific  facts 
and  very  readable. 
581  (2-3) 

Dana,  Mrs.  W.  S.    Plants  and  their  children.  Amer.  Bk.         .76 

A  series  of  easy  lessons  or  readings  on  fruits,  seeds,  roots  and  stems, 
buds,   leaves  and  flowers. — ^Pittsburgh. 
581  (4-6) 


BOTANY,  FARMING  AND  FORESTRY  19 

Fultz,  F.  M.    Fly-aways  and  other  seed  travelers.     Public  School 

Pub.        .75 

How  seeds,  by  flying,  floating,  clinging,  tiunbling  and  other  methods, 
travel  to  new  fields. 
581.54  (3-5) 

Gibson,  W.   H.     Blossom  hosts  and  insect  gruests;    ed.  by  E.  E. 

Davie.  Newson        .92 

Useful  study  of  flower  fertilization. — Wisconsin. 
581.16          (7-8) 

Hartley,  C.  P.     How  to  grow  an  acre  of  corn.     (U.  S.  Dept.  of 

Agriculture.     Farmer's  bull.  No.  537.)     Supt.  of  Documents        .05 

A  pamphlet  that  will  be  much  called  for  by  boys'  corn  clubs.     It  gives 
brief,  definite  directions  for  raising  maximum  com  yields  on  one  acre  of 
ground. — A.    L.   A. 
633  (5-7) 

Keffer,    C.   A.     Nature   studies    on   the   farm;    soils    and    plants. 

(Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .60 

Simple  lessons,  aiming  rather  to  provoke  observation  and  investigation 
than  to  be  instructive. — ^A.  L.  A. 
570  (5-7) 

Morley,  Mrs.  M.  W.    Flowers  and  their  friends.  Ginn         .72 

An   especially   helpful   book   for   the   teaching   of   elementary   botany, 
charmingly  written  and  illustrated. — Pittsburgh. 
580.4  (5-7) 

Morley,  Mrs.  M.  W.    Seed-babies.  Ginn         .5S 

The  bean  and  the  peanut  children,  the  melons  and  their  cousins  and  other 
seed-babies  talk  with  a  little  boy  and  tell  him  what  they  eat  and  hoyr 
they  grow. — Pittsburgh. 

581  (2-3) 

Rogers,  J.  E.     Trees  worth  knowing.  Doubleday      1.75 

Small  enough  to  carry  about  as  a  tree  guide. 

582  (6-8) 

Roth,   Filbert.     First  book  of  forestry.  Ginn       1.00 

Chapters  on  the  woods,  the  protection  of  forests,  how  to  distinguish 
common  trees.     Schools  should  also  get  from  the  U.  S.  Forest  service  at 
Washington    a    copy    of    Pinchot's    excellent    little    voliune,    "Primer    of 
Forestrj',"  a  free  government  document. — Oregon. 
634.9  (7-8) 

Sargent,  F.  C.     Corn  plants;  their  uses  and  ways  of  life. 

Houghton       1.40 
Uses  the  word   "com"  in  a  broad  sense.     Describes  the  cereals  and 
the   growth  of   each. — Wisconsin. 
633.13  (5-7) 

Sharp,  D,  L.    Fall  of  the  year.  Houghton       1.00 

590.4          (5,-7) 
Siusser,  E.  Y.,  and  others.     Stories  of  Luther  Burbank  and  his 

plant   school,      (school   ed.)  Scribner         .8& 

The   personal    side    of   his   life    is    interwoven    in    the    stories    of   his 

seeming  miracles. 

580  (5-7) 

Stack,   F.  W.     Wild  flowers  every  child  should  know.       Grosset      1.00 

580          (6-8) 
Stokes,  Susan.    Ten  common  trees.  Amer.  Bk.        .52 

The  material  is  arranged  in  the  form  of  stories,  descriptive  of  the  life 
of   the    tree    and   of    its    relation    with    the    soil,    moisture,    winds    and 
insects. — Oregon. 
582  (4-6) 

Stone,  G.  L.,  and  Fickett,  M.  G.    Trees  in  prose  and  poetry.    Ginn        .76 

Contains  a  list  of  historic  American  trees. — ^Pittsburgh. 
808.8  (5-6) 

Weed,  C.  M.    Wild  flower  families.  Lippincott       1.50 

Helpful  for  beginners  in  botany. 
580  (7-8) 


20  GARDENING  AND  ANIMALS 

GARDENING. 

Duncan,  Frances.     Mary's  garden  and  how  it  grew.  Century       1.75 

716  (5-6) 

Duncan,  Frances.    When  mother  lets  us  garden.  MofCat       1.25 

Simply  written  and  attractive,  as  well  as  practical. 

716  (5-6) 

Foster,  O.  H.    Gardening  for  little  girls.  Duffield       1.25 

Planting  and  care  of  flowers,  vegetables,  houseplants  and  shrubs. 
716  (6-8) 

Fullerton,  E.  L.     Small  gardens  for  small  folks.  Burpee         .05 

716         (4-0) 
Higgins,    M.    M.     Little   gardens   for   boys   and   girls.      Houghton       1.50 
Clear   and  practical,  having   as   the   main   object  to   instil   a   love   of 
gardening. — ^A.  L.  A. 
716  (5-6) 

Martin,  A.    Little  gardening  hook  for  a  little  girl.  Page       1.10 

716         (6-7) 
Paine,  A.  B.    Little  garden  calendar  for  boys  and  girls.     Altemus       1.50 
Hints  from  Davy's  and  Prue's  garden,  occasional  simple  botany,  short 

stories  about  flowers,  one  or  two  poems. — Cleveland. 

716  (4-5) 

Verrill,  A.  H.    Harper's  book  for  young  gardeners.  Harper       1.60 

In  three  parts.     The  garden  profitable.   The  garden   ornamental,    The 
garden  practical.     Indoor  and  outdoor  plant  culture. 
716  (7-8) 

ANIMALS. 

Baskett,    J.    N.     Story    of    the    fishes.      (Home    reading    books.) 

Appleton       1.20 
Describes  habits  and  structure  of  all  kinds  of  fishes. 
597  (5-6) 

*Bostock,  F.  C.    Training  of  wild  animals.  Century       1.75 

The  author  is  one  of  the  greatest  of  wild  animal  trainers. 
599.7  (7-8) 

♦Breariey,  H.  C.    Animal  secrets  told:  a  book  of  "whys."     Stokes       1.75 
Scientifically   accurate   and   strikingly   interesting   chapters   giving   the 
reasons  for  the  various  kinds,  shapes,  and  positions   of  animals'   eyes, 
ears,  mouths,  tongues,  etc. — A.  L.  A. 
591.4  (6-7) 

Bryant,  Mrs.  L.  M.    Famous  pictures  of  real  animals.  Lane       1.50 

Descriptions  of  animals  in  paintings  and  sculpture  from  earliest  history 
to  the  present. 
729.4  (7-8) 

♦Borroughs,  John.     Squirrels  and  other  fur-bearers.  (School  ed.) 

Houghton         .92 

The  ways  of  squirrels,  weasels,  rabbits,  etc.  are  treated  in  the  author's 
usual  leisurely  and  charming  style. 
599.3  (5-8) 

Cram,  W.  E.     More  little  beasts  of  field  and  wood.  Small      1.25 

Sketches  of  characteristics  and  habits  of  the  smaller  wild  animals. 
599  (6-8) 

Davis,  A.  C.    Nature  stories  for  youngest  readers;   animals  tame 

and  wild.  Educ.  Publ.        .60 

Sentences  are  simple,  short  and  easily  grasped. 
599  (2-3) 

Fabre,  J.  H.    Our  humble  helpers.  Century      2.50 

All  about  such  familiar  creatures  as  the  hen,  the  dog,  the  cat  and  the 
sheep. 
636  (6-8) 


ANIMALS  21 

*Ghosh,  Prince  S.   K.     Wonders  of  the  jungle.     Book  I.     Heath        .96 
Lives  of  elephant,  camel,  deer  and  bear. 
591.5          (5-6) 

Ghosh,   Prince  S.   K.     Wonders  of  the  jungle.     Book  II.     Heath        .96 
Lives   of   tiger,    lion,   jaguar   and   leopard.      Good   for   supplementary 
reading. 
591.5  (6-7) 

Hawkes,  Clarence.     Trail  to  the  woods.  Amer.  Bk.        .56 

Entertaining  record  of  observation  of  animal  life. 
599  (6-8) 

Hornaday,   W.    L.     American   natural  history.     4    vol.     Scrribner    10.00 
Invaluable  in  the  school  room. 
591.97  (7-8) 

Ingersoll,    Ernest.     Wild   neighbors.      (Standard   school   library.) 

Macmillan       1.60 
Studies    of   the    squirrel,    panther,    coyote,    badger,    porcupine,    skunk, 
etc — Wisconsin. 
596  (6-8) 

Kelly,  Mrs.  M.  B.     Short  stories  of  our  shy  neighbors.     (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Little  nature  studies  describing  in  story  fashion  the  form,  color  and 
habits  of  various  animals,  birds  and  insects. — Pittsburgh. 
591.5  (4-5) 

McNally,  G.  M.    Babyhood  of  wild  beasts.  Doran       2.00 

A  book  that  entertains  and  instructs  children,   and  gives  real  know- 
ledge of  baby  beasts. 
591.5  (5-7) 

Miller,  O.  T.    Our  home  pets.  Harper       1.75 

Directions  for  care  of  household  pets. 
636  (5-7) 

♦Mix,  J.  I.     Mighty  animals.  Amer.  Bk.        .52 

Facts  about  prehistoric  animals  suitable  for  young  readers. 
566  (4-6) 

Montieth,  John.     Some  useful  animals  and  what  they  do  for  us. 

Amer.  Bk.         .64 
599          (3-4) 

Mooney,  H.  J.    How  to  train  your  own  dogs;  ed.  by  E.  F.  Carson. 

Saalfield        .60 
A   practical   guide   and  manual   for   those   who   desire   to   teach   their 
dogs  to  become  valuable  and  useful  pets.     Written  by  a   Barnum   and 
Bailey  animal  trainer. 
636.7  (7-8) 

Nelson,  E.  W.    Wild  animals  of  North  America.  Natl.  Geog.       3.00 

Valuable  for  children  of  all  grades. 
591.5  (4-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.    Haunters  of  the  silences.  Page       3.00 

591.5  (6-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.    Secret  trail.  Macmillan       2.50 

Ten  sketches  of  animal  life.     (School  edition  preparing.) 
591.5  (7-8) 

Rogers,  J.  E.    Wild  animals  every  child  should  know.         Grosset      1.00 
Descriptions  of  wild  animals  and  their  habits. 
591.5  (6-7) 

♦Sharp,  D.  L.    Watcher  in  the  woods,     (school  ed.)  Century        .50 

Stories  of  animal  and  bird  life  by  a  careful  observer. 
591.5         (7-8) 

Verrill,  A.  H.    Harper's  book  for  young  naturalists.  Harper       1.60 

Guide  to  collecting  and  preparing  specimens,  with  descriptions  of  the 
life,  habits  and  haunts  of  birds,  insects,  plants,  etc. 
579  (6-8) 


22  ANIMAL  STORIES 

ANIMAL  STORIES 

Bartlett,  L.  L.    Animals  at  home,     (Eclectic  readings.)     Amer.  Bk.         .56 
Stories  and  anecdotes  about  animals. 
591.5  (3-4) 

Brown,  John.    Rab  and  his  friends.  Houghton       1.50 

This   edition   contains    "Our   dogs,"      "Marjorie   Fleming,"    and    other 
selections. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Darling,   E.   B.     Baldy  of  Nome.  Penn       2.50 

"Baldy  is  a  real  dog." 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Du  Chaillu,  Paul.     In  African  forest  and  jungle.  Scribner       2.00 

916.7         (7-8) 
Du  Chaillu,  Paul.    Wild  life  under  the  equator.     (Books  for  boys.) 

Harper.       1.75 
Full  of  exciting  adventures  among  the  savage  tribes  and  wild  animals 
of  West  Africa. 
916.7  (6-8) 

Eaton,  W.  P.     On  the  edge  of  the  wilderness.  Wilde       1.75 

Stories  of  wild  folk  for  boys  and  girls. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

*Gask,  Lilian.    Treasury  of  animal  stories.  Crowell         .75 

Stories  of  jungle  beasts,  illustrated  from  photographs. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Hawkes,   Clarence.     Wood  and  water  friends.  Crowell       2.00 

Interesting  and  instructive  studies  of  everyday  birds  and  beasts. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Johonnot,  James.     Book  of  cats  and  dogs.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

"Cats  and  dogs  and  other  friends  for  little  folks." 
Fiction         (2-3) 

Johonnot,  James.    Friends  in  feathers  and  fur.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

Stories  of  birds,  squirrels,  mice,  toads,  rabbits  and  other  small  crea- 
tures. 
Fiction         (2-3) 

Jordan,  D.  S.    Story  of  Matka.     (school  ed.)  World  Bk.         .80 

Story  of  the  fur  seal,  based  upon  the  author's  observations  on  Priv- 
ilov  Island. — Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Jordan,  D.  S.    True  tales  of  birds  and  beasts.     (Home  and  school 

classics.)  Heath         .84 

True  animal  stories  by  Thoreau,  Irving,  Joaquin   Miller,   and   others. 
— Oregon. 
591.5  (7-8) 

•  *Kipling,  Rudyard.     Jungle  book.  Doubleday       2.00 

Interests  children  in  animal  life,  though  purely  fiction. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

'    *Kipling,  Rudyard.     Just-so  stories,     (juvenile  ed.)         Doubleday       2,00 
One  of  the  best  groups  of  make-believe  animal  stories  for  arousing 
Interest  and  curiosity. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Lang,  Andrew,    ed.    Animal  story  book,  Longmans       1.75 

More  or  less  true  animal  stories,  collected  from  various  sources. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Lippincott,  J.  W.     Bun,  a  wild  rabbit.  Penn       1.23 

A  composite  biography  of  veritable  happenings  in  the  life  of  a  number 
of  rabbits.    Free  from  personification.— A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (3-5) 

Lippincott,  J.  W.     Red  Ben,  the  fox  of  Oak  Ridge.  Penn.       1.2S 

Very  interesting  stories  of  the  adventures  of  a  fox. 
Fiction         (0-7) 


ANIMAL  STORIES  23 

♦London,  Jack.    Call  of  the  wild.     (Everybody's  library.)     Grosset      1.00 
Good  dog  story  of  the  Klondike. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Long,  W.  J.    Little  brother  to  the  bear,  and  other  animal  stories. 
Stories  of  the  coon,  lynx,  toad,  bear,  wild  cat,  etc. 

Ginn        .68 
591.5  (5-7) 

*Long,  W.  J.    Northern  trails.     2  vol.  Ginn        .64 

Sketches  of  animals  in  the  far  north. 
591.5         (4-7) 

Long,  W.  J.    Secrets  of  the  woods.  Ginn        .72 

Studies  of  the  otter,  squirrel,  deer  and  other  shy  animals. 
591.5  (5-7) 

Long,  W.  J.    Ways  of  the  wood  folk.  Ginn        .72 

The  bear,  the  fox,  Br'er  Rabbit,  wild  duck,  moose,  owl  and  other  wood 
folk,  large  and  small. 
591.5  (4-7) 

*Long,  W.  J.    Wilderness  ways.  Ginn         .64 

Ways  of  the  birds  and  beasts  of  the  great  northern  woods,  the  caribou, 
the  lynx,  weasel,  great  homed  owl,  loon  and  others. 
59L5  (5-7) 

Long,  W.  J.    Wood  folk  at  school.  Ginn        .68 

Personal  observations  of  animals  and  birds. — N.Y. 
591.5  (5-7) 

iLoring,  J.  A.     African  adventure  stories.  Scribner       1.65 

Stories  of  the  field  naturalist  of  the  Roosevelt  expedition. 
916.7  (7-8) 

Miller,  Joaquin.     True  bear  stories.  Rand       1.25 

Fascinating  tales  of  the  author's  experience  with  bears. 
599.7  (6-8) 

Ollivant,  Alfred.     Bob,   son  of  battle. 

One  of  the  best  dog  stories  ever  written. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.     Haunters  of  the  pine  gloom. 
Story  of  the  lynx. 
591.5          (7-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.    Hoof  and  claw. 

Stories  of  bears,  wolves,  and  other  forest  dwellers. 
591.5  (7-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.    Kindred  of  the  wild.  Page       3.00 

Stories  of  animal  characteristics  by  a  close  observer. 
591.5  (7-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.     King  of  the  Mamozekel.  Page         .75 

Story  of  the  moose. 
591.5  (7-8) 

Roberts,  C.  G.  D.    Kings  in  exile.  Macmillan       2.50 

Stories  of  captured  bison,  bear,  wolf  and  moose.     (School  edition  pre- 
paring.) 

591.5  (5-6) 

St.  Nicholas  magazine.    Animal  stories,  retold  from  St.  Nicholas. 

7  volumes.  Century,     ea.       1.25 

About  animals.  Lion  and  tiger  stories. 

Bear  stories.  Panther  stories. 

Cat  stories.  Stories  of  brave  dogs. 

Elephant  stories. 
Fiction         (4-7) 


Doubleday 

1.75 

Page 

.75 

Macmillan 

2.50 

24  BIRDS 

Saunders,   Marshall.     Beautiful  Joe.   (illus.  ed.)     American  Bapt. 

Pub. 
An  autobiography  of  a  dog,  teaching  kindness  to  animals. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Schwartz,  J.  A.    Wilderness  babies,     (school  ed.)  Little 

Short,  simple,  but  well-told  accounts  of  baby  animals. 
591.5  (4-6) 

Seers,  H.  W.    Book  of  nature  stories  to  tell  children.  Dodd 

Real  stories  of  animal  life  for  reading  and  telling. 
591.5  (3-5) 

♦Seton,   E.  T.     Biography  of  a  grizzly.  Century 

Story  of  "Wab"  a  grizzly  bear  cub  in  Yellowstone  park. 
591.5  (5-6) 

Seton,  E.  T.    Biography  of  a  silver  fox.  Century 

To  show  the  child  world  how  the  fox  lives. 
591.5  (3-5) 

Seton,  E.  T.     Krag  and  Johnny  Bear.  Scribner 

Personal  account  of  Krag,  the  ram  and  Johnny  Bear,  the  grizzly  cub. 
591.5  (3-5) 

Seton,  E.  T.     Lobo,  Rag  and  Vixen.  Scribner 

Stories  of  Lobo,  the  wolf,  Redruff,  Raggyluff,  the  rabbit,  and  "Vixen, 
the  fox,  from  "Wild  animals  I  have  known." 
591.5  (5-6) 

Seton,  E.  T.     Trail  of  the  Sandhill  stag.  Scribner 

591.5         (4-6) 

•Seton,   E.  T.     Wild  animals  I  have  known.  Grosset 

Includes  Krag  and  Johnny  Bear,  Lobo,  Rag  and  Vixen  and  others. 
"It  should  be   put  vrtth  Kipling  and  Hans  Christian   Andersen   as  a 
classic." 
591.5  (6-8) 

♦Seton,  E.  T.    Wild  animals  at  home.  Grosset 

The  coyote,   prairie   dog,   fox,  marten,   beaver,   elk,   moose,   bear  and 
other  animals  of  North  America. 
591.5  (6-8) 

♦Seweli,  Anna.    Black  Beauty;  the  autobiography  of  a  horse. 

Lothrop 
Popular  ed. 
Cultivates  a  spirit  of  kindness  to  horses. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Smith,  A.  H.    Four-footed  friends.  Ginn 

Tales  of  twenty-three  four-footed  friends. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Snell,  R.  J.    Little  White  Fox  and  his  arctic  friends.  Little 

Fiction         (2-4) 

BIRDS. 

Baynes,  E.  H.    Wild  bird  guests;  how  to  entertain  them.    Button 
Birds,  bird  houses,  feeding-boxes,  etc. 
598.2  (6-8) 

Blanchan,  Neltje.    Birds  worth  knowing.  Doubleday 

Material  adapted  from  the  author's  "Birds  every  child  should  know," 
Bird  neighbors,"  "How  to  attract  wild  birds,"   "Birds   that  hunt  and 
are  hunted,"  with  additional  text. 
598.2  (6-8) 

Burgess,  Thornton.    Burgess  bird  book  for  children.  Little 

A  story  book  that  is  also  an  authoritative  bird  book.  Probably  the 

best  bird  book  for  school  children.    Beautifully  illustrated  in  colors. 
598.2          (4-7) 

Burroughs,  John.    Bird  stories  from  Burroughs.  Houghton 

Selections  follow  in  a  roughly  chronological  order,  according  to  the  time 
of  the  bird's  arrival,  nesting,  etc.— A,  L.  A. 
598.2         (7-8) 


BIRDS,  INSECTS  AND  INSECT  STORIES  25 

Burroughs,  John.     Birds  and  bees,  Sharp  Eyes  and  other  papers 

Houghton         .56 
A  collection  of  his  best  nature  essays,  channing  in  style,  accurate  in 
observation  and  adapted  to  the  understanding  and  vocabulary  of  a  child. 
591.5  (7-8) 

Eckstrom,  F.  H.    Bird  book.  Heath       1.28 

Observations  of  characteristics  of  birds. 
598.2  (5-7) 

♦Fifty  common  birds  of  farm  and  orchard.     (U.  S.  Dept.  of  Agri- 
culture.    Farmer's  bulletin  No.  513.)       Supt.  of  Documents        .15 

Attractive,   colored   illustrations   of   fifty   birds,    accompanied  by   des- 
criptions and  notes  about  their  habits. — A.  L.  A. 
598.2          (5-7) 

Gilmore,  A.  F.    Birds  through  the  year.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

598.2          (6-8) 
McFee,  Inez.     Little  friends  in  feathers.  Barse       2.50 

Pictures  of  forty-five  birds,  with  descriptions  of  seventy-five  members 

of  the   robin,    thrush,    woodpecker,    sparrow,    blackbird,    swallow,    finch, 

mockingbird  and  other  well-known  bird  families. 

598.2  (5-7) 

Miller,  O.  T.     Children's  book  of  birds.  Houghton       3.00 

Facts  in  regard  to  the  bird's  home,  the  way  in  which  it  travels,  sleeps 
and  changes  clothes. 
598.2  (5-6) 

Miller,  O.  T.    True  biid  stories  from  my  note  book,     ^chool  ed.) 

•  Houghton         .92 
Short,  interesting  studies  and  sketches  of  bird  life   and  character. 
598.2  (4-5) 

Patteson,  S.  L.     How  to  have  bird  neighbors.  Heath        .92 

Photographs  by  author. 
598.2  (6-8) 

Trafton,  G.  H.     Bird  friends:      a  complete  bird  book  for  Ameri- 
cans. Houghton       3.09 
598.2         (4-8) 

INSECTS  AND  INSECT  STORIES. 

Bertelli,  Luigi.     Prince  and  his  ants;    tr.  by  Woodruff.  Holt       1.35 

A  story  containing  much  information  of  value. 
Fiction  (5-6) 

Brailliar,  Floyd.     Knowing  insects  through  stories.  Funk       1.75 

All  kinds  of  insects,  butterflies,  grasshoppers,  ants,  bees,  etc.  are  des- 
cribed in  delightful  story  form. 
595.7  (5-7) 

Comstock,  Mrs.  A.  B.    Ways  of  the  six-footed.  Ginn         .60 

On  mosquitoes,  katydids,  wasps,  moths,  ants  and  other  common  insects. 
Of  value  and  interest  as  observations  and  attractive  in  literary  quality 
and  illustrations. 
595.7  (5-7) 

Fabre,  J.  H.     Insect  adventures,  retold  for  young  people  by  L.  S. 

Hasbrouck.  Dodd       2.50 

This  book  makes  a  big  appeal  to  young  people. — Book  Rev.  Dig. 
595.7  (6-8) 

♦Hardy,  M.  E.,  and  A.  S.    Fairy  roads  to  Science  town.        Dodd      1.50 
In  the  insect  world  with  the  wasps,  snails,  toads,  etc. 
595.7  (3-4) 

Howard,  L.  O.     House  fly.  Stokes       2.50 

Illustrated  life  of  the  most  common  and  least  understood  insect. 
595.7  (7-8) 

Kellogg,  V.  L.    Nuova,  or  The  new  bee.  Houghton       2.25 

A  story  with  vivid  description  of  life  in  a  beehive,  songs  by  Charlotte 
Kellogg  and  pictures  by  Milo  Winter. 
Fiction         (5-7) 


2g  PREHISTORIC   MAN 

Noel,  Maurice.    Buz,  the  life  and  adventures  of  a  honey  bee.    Holt       1.00 
Another  lively  story  about  life  in  a  beehive. 
595.7  (3-5) 

Patch,  E.  M.     Dame  Bug  and  her  babies.     Pine  Cone  Publishing 

Co.,  Orono,  Me.         .75 
These  stories  ought  to  fascinate  any  child  who  has  already  shown  an 
interest  in  out-door  things,  and  ought  to  arouse  this  interest  in  any  that 
seem  not  yet  to  have  it. — Children's  Cat. 
595.7  (3-6) 

Wright,  J.  M.     Seaside  and  wayside.  4  vol.  Heath 

No.  1.  Wasps,  spiders,  bees  and  some  univalve  mollusks.  .72 
No.  2.  Ants,  earthworms,  flies,  beetles,  jellyfish,  starfish.  .8C 
No.  3.     Plants,  insects,  birds  and  fishes.  .8? 

No.  4.     Stories  of  insects.  10^ 

A  series  of  nature  readers,  intended  for  the  children's  oven  reading. 
372.35  (3-6) 

PREHISTORIC  MAN. 

Austin,  Mary.     Trail  book.  Houghton       2'.5C 

Prehistoric  animals   and  people  are   made   very  real   in   this  unusual 
tale  of  ancient  days. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Bayliss,  C.  K.    Lolami,  the  little  cliff  dweller.     Public  School  Pub.         .6( 
Primitive   life    of   the   Pueblo   Indians     in     the     cliffs    of     the     Rocky 
moimtains. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Bayliss,  C.  K.     Lolami  in  Tusayan.  Public  School  Pub.         .6( 

The  further  development  of  Lolami,  showing  how  ideas  of  homes,  honor 
and  happiness  came  to  primitive  man. — Oregon. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

*Dopp,    K.    E.     Early   cave-men.      (Industrial  and   social   history 

ser.)  Rand         .90 

571.12         (2-3) 

Dopip,   K.   E.     Early   sea-people,      (Industrial   and   social   history 

ser.)  Rand       1.0{ 

Description  in  the  form  of  a  story  of  the  ancestors  of  the  Scandina- 
vians and  the  Teutons,  a  type  now  represented  by  the  North  Germans  and 
the  Swedes. 
571  (4-5) 

*Dopp,    K.    E.     Later  cave-men.      (Industrial   and   social   history 

ser.)  Rand         .9( 

Has  to  do  with  the  age  of  the  chase.     Very  attractive  and  interesting 
series,  designed  to  present  in  narrative  form  a  "generalized  view  of  the 
main  steps  in  the  early  progress  of  the  race." 
571.12         (4-5) 

Dopp,  K.  E.     Tree-dwellers.     (Industrial  and  social  history  ser.) 

Rand         .9C 
The  language  is  simple,  illustration   is  simple,   and   "things   to  think 
about'   after  each  lesson  will  stimulate  thought  and  imagination. — Oregon 
571         (2-3) 

Mclntyre,  M.  A.    Cave  boy  of  the  age  of  stone.  Appleton         .6C 

Story  of  the  life  of  primitive  man,  the  making  of  crude  tools  and  the 
discovery  of  fire. 
571.12  (3-4) 

♦Marcy,  Mrs.  M.  E.    Stories  of  the  cave  people.  Kerr       1.2i 

Stories  of  the  struggles  of  prehistoric  man,  adapted  from  L.  H.  Mor- 
gan's "Ancient  society." 
571.12  (6-7) 


INDUSTRIES   AND  INVENTIONS  27 

Rolt- Wheeler,  Francis.     Aztec  hunters.  Lothrop       1.75 

Story  of  mystery  and  explanation,  with  good  descriptions  of  civilization 
a  thousand  years  before  the  coming  of  the  white  man. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Rolt-Wheeler,  Francis.     Monster  hunters.  Lothrop       1.75 

Story  of  a  boy  paleontologist's  experiences   in  the  Sahara  desert  and 
other  parts  of  the  world. 
Fiction          (6-8) 
♦Van  Loon,  H.  W.    Ancient  man.  Boni  &  Ldveright      3.00 

Simple   studies  of  primitive   life   from  prehistoric   days   down.      Many 
maps  and  drawings. 
571  (7-8) 

♦Waterloo,  Stanley,     Story  of  Ab:  a  tale  of  the  time  of  the  cave- 
man. Doubleday       1.75 

The  struggle  of  the  cave-men  against  the  great  and  terrible  animals  of 
their  day. 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Waterloo,  Stanley.     Ab,  the  cave-man.  Flanagan        .65 

The  story  of  Ab  rewritten  for  youngest  readers. 
Fiction         (2-3) 
Wiley,  Belle,  and    Edick,  G.  W.     Lodrix,   the   little  lake-dweller. 

Appleton        .60 
A  boy's  adventures  In  prehistoric  times. 
Fiction         (2-3) 

INDUSTRIES  AND  INVENTIONS. 

Allen,  N.  B.    Industrial  studies:     United  States.  Ginn        .92 

Describes    in    pleasing   narrative    the    great    industries   of    the    United 

States,  their  processes  and  the  physical  geography  connected  with  them. 

—A.  L.  A. 

609.73  (7-8) 

Bassett,  S.  W.     Story  of  leather.  Penn.       1.25 

Story  with  interesting  information  skillfully  interwoven.  One  of  the  in- 
dustrial series,  which  includes  the  following  volxuues: 

Story  of  cotton.  Story  of  porcelain. 

Story  of  gold  and  silver.  Story  of  silk. 

Story  of  iron.  Story  of  sugar. 

Story  of  glass.  Story  of  wool. 

Story  of  lumber. 

Fiction         (5-7) 
♦Bond,  A.  R.    American  boy's  engineering  book.  Lippincott      2.50 

232  diagrams,  with  text  by  an  author  who  knows  boys  and  knows  how 

to  explain  things  clearly. 

620  (6-8) 

Bond,  A.  R.    Inventions  of  the  great  war.  Century       2M 

Guns,  hand  grenades,  gas,  tanks,  aeroplanes,  camouflage,  submarines, 
floating  forts  and  many  other  interesting  things  are  described. — Wisconsin 
355  (7-8) 

Bond,  A.  R.     Scientific  American  boy  at  school.  Munn       1.80 

Describes  and   illustrates  many   Interesting   things  that  boys   can   do. 
— A.L.A. 
680  (7-8) 

Bond,  A.  R.     With  the  men  who  do  things.  Munn       1.80 

620         (6-8) 
Bradish,  S.  P.     Stories  of  country  life.  Amer.  Bk.        .60 

Presents    various   farming   industries   varied   by   discussion   of   amber, 

coal  and  iron,  and  true  stories  of  animals. — Prentice  and  Power. 

630  (3-4) 

Brooks,  E.  C.    Story  of  corn  and  the  westward  migration.     Rand      1.00 
Agriculture  in  the  progress  of  civilization. 
838.1  (7-8) 

Carpenter,  F.  G.    Foods  and  their  uses.     (Industrial  reader.) 

Scribner        .88 
630         (5-8) 


28  INDUSTRIES   AND  INVENTIONS 

Carpenter,  F.  G.     How  the  world  is  clothed.  Amer.  Bk.         .96 

How  the  world  is  fed.  630  How  the  world  is  housed.  910 

(5-7) 

Chamberlain,  J.  F.    How  we  are  sheltered:  a  geographical  reader. 

Macmillan         .88 
Partial    contents :      Houses    In    cliffs — Indian    homes — Filipino    houses 
— Lumbering — How  bricks  are  made — Artificial  stone — Glass. 
Others  in  series:  How  we  are  clothed.  670 

How  we  are  fed.     630  How  we  travel.     380 

(5-7) 

Chase,  Annie,  and  Clow,  E.     Stories  of  industry.     2  vol.     Educ. 

Pub.     ea.         .75 
Interesting  information  that  will  aid  yoimg  people  in  acquiring  habits 
of  observation  and  lead  to  a  knowledge  of  common  things. 
670  (5-7) 

Collins,  F.  A.    Wireless  man;   his  work  and  adventures  on  land 

and  sea.  Century.       1.75 

654.1         (6-8) 

Crissey,  Forrest.     Story  of  foods.  Rand       1.60 

Profusely  illustrated.     Appeared  in  the  Saturday  Evening  Post. — Bkl. 
630  (5-8) 

Darrow,  F.  L.     Boys'  own  book  of  great  inventions.     Macmillan       1.75 
Well  illustrated  descriptions  of  working  principles  of  modern  scientific 
inventions,   with  directions  for  performing  many   experiments. 
609  (6-8) 

Fisher,    E.    F.     Resources   and    industries   of    the   United    States. 

Ginn         .96 

The  chief  sources  for  the  book  are  the  publications  of  the  TJ.  S.  Geolog- 
ical  Survey,  the  Department  of  Agriculture,   and  the  Bureau  of  Mines, 
and  the  Report  of  the  National  Conservation  commission. — ^Preface. 
670  (6-8) 

Forman,  S.  E.,     Stories  of  useful  inventions,     (school  ed.) 

Century         .90 
609         (7-8) 
Hale,   E.   E.     Stories  of  invention,   told  by  inventors    and    their 

friends.  Little       1.50 

609         (6-8) 
♦Kirby,    Mary,  and    Elizabeth.     Aunt   Martha's   corner   cupboard. 

Educ.  Pub.         .60 
About  tea,  coffee,  sugar  and  other  articles,  and  the  countries  in  which 
they  are  found. 
630  (3-6) 

Rocheleau,  W.  F.    Great  American  industries.     4  vol.  Flanagan  ea.         .75 
Vol.  1.  Minerals.     55,3  Vol.  3.  Manufactures.     670 

Vol.  2.  Products  of  the  soil.  633     Vol.  4.  Transportation.      380 
(5-8) 

Rolt-Wheeler,  F.  W.    Wonder  of  war  at  sea.  Lothrop       1.75 

Describes  the  operations  of  a   navy   in   war.     Illustrations  from   war 
photographs. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Rolt-Wheeler,  F.  W.     Wonder  of  war  in  the  air.  Lothrop       1.75 

Story  of  the  American  air  service. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Rolt-Wheeler,  F.  W.    Wonder  of  war  in  the  Holy  Land.     Lothrop       1.75 
The  adventures  of  a  boy  who  accompanies  an  archaelogical  expedition 
to  Palestine. 
Fiction         (6-8) 


HANTHWORK  FOR  BOYS  AND  GIRLS  29 

Rolt-Wheeler,  F.  W.    Wonder  of  war  on  land.  Lothrop       1.75 

Descriptions  and  adventures  of  modern  warfare. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Smith,  L.  Y.     Romance  of  aircraft.  Stokes       2.75 

Early  history  of  the  subject  in  readable  form  for  children,  from  flying 
in  France  in  the  eighteenth  century  to  the  aircraft  of  the  world  war. 
629.17  (7-8) 

♦Twombly,    F.   D.,   and    Dana,  J.  C,   comps.     Romance   of  labor; 

scenes  from  good  novels  depicting-  joy  in  work.     Macmillan         .80 

Sixteen  extracts,  describing  the  occupations  of  agriculture,  fishing,  en- 
gineering, manufacture,  herding,  forestry,  mining,  and  science. — A.  L.  A. 
331         (6-8) 

Verrill,  A.  H.    Harper's  air  craft  book  for  boys.  Harper       1.35 

Contents :    Why   the   aeroplane   flies ;   Model   aeroplanes ;     Gliders   or 
non-propelled  aeroplanes;    Varied  types  of  aeroplanes — Hydro-aeroplanes 
and  flying  boats. 
533.6  (7-8) 

Warman,  Cy.    Story  of  the  railroad.  Appleton       2.00 

Building  the  great  transcontinental  lines. 
656.673  (7-8) 

HANDIWORK   FOR    BOYS   AND   GIRLS. 

Adams,  J.   D.     When  mother  lets  us  carpenter.  Moffat       1.25 

684         (4-6) 
Adams,  J.  D.     Carpentry  for  beginners.  Moffat       1.75 

Sketches,  diagrams  and  directions  for  elementary  carpentry. 

684  (6-8) 

Adams,  J.  H.    Harper's  indoor  book  for  boys.  Harper       1.60 

Practical,   comprehensive    chapters   on   carpentry     and     wood-carving, 
metal-work  and  wire-work,  relief-etching  and  clay-modeling,  bookbinding, 
printing  and  other  useful  indoor  pastimes. — ^A.  L.  A. 
680  (7-8) 

Adams,  J.  H.    Harper's  machinery  book  for  boys.  Harper       1.60 

Explains  in  the  simplest  and  most  practical  way  the  tools  and  general 
outfit  which  are  necessary,  and  the  elementary  principles,  and  then  shows 
what  the  boy  can  do  himself  readily  and  inexpensively. 
531.8  (7-8) 

Beard,  D.  C.    Jack  of  all  trades.  Scribner      3.00 

A  varied  "how  to"  book,  by  which  a  boy  can  become  literally  a  "Jack 
of  all  trades"  and  do  almost  anything  he  cares  to  for  his  ovm  amusement. 
790  (5-7) 

Beard,  Lina  and  A.  B.    Little  folks  handy  book.  Scribner      1.12 

Simple  handicraft,  describing  toys  made  from  material  readily  available, 
and  so  clearly  illustrated  that  children  can  use  the  book  without  the  aid 
of  the  teacher. — Wisconsin. 
790  (2-5) 

Bowsfield,  C.  0.    How  boys  and  girls  can  earn  money.  Forbes       1.25 

Suggestive  rather  than  detailed  Information. 
374  (6-8) 

*Burpell,  0.  F.     Little  cook  book  for  a  little  girl.  Page      1.10 

641  (6-7) 

Burrell,  C.  F.    Little  housekeeping  book  for  a  little  girl.         Page       1.10 
Directions  for  doing  simple  household  tasks  In  the  best  way. 

640  (6-7) 

Burrell,  C.  F.    Fun  of  cooking.  Century       1.75 

A  cook  book  in  story  form. 

641  (6-7) 

Collins,  A.  F.    Amateur  mechanic.  Appleton       1.50 

Will  help  the  boy  to  an  understanding  of  elementary  physics  and  its 
formulas  as  well  as  practice.     Not  a  book  for  amusement. — Bkl. 
531  (8) 


30  HANDIWORK  FOR  BOYS  AND  GIRLS 

Collins,  A.  F.    Boys'  airplane  book.  Stokes       1.75 

History  of  airplane  construction  and  development  together  with  figures 
and  diagrams  for  construction  of  various  models. 
533.6         (7-8) 

Collins,  A.  F.    Boys'  book  of  engine  building.  Small      1.35 

How   and   why   of    engine   construction   and   operation    for    the    boy    me- 
chanic. 
621         (6-8) 

"•■Collins,  A.  F.    Handicraft  for  boys.  Stokes      1.75 

Practical  working  directions  for  making  many  things  boys  delight  in. 
680         (6-8) 

Cornell,  L.  F.    Little  sewing  book  for  a  little  girl.  Page      1.10 

646         (6-7) 
Foster,   E.  W.     Elementary  woodworking.  Ginn      1.00 

684         (6-7) 
Foster,  O.  H.    Cooking  for  little  girls.  Duffield       1.25 

641         (5-7) 
Foster,  O.  H.     Sewing  for  little  girls.  Duffield      1.25 

646         (5-7) 
Fryer,  J.  E.    Mary  Frances  series.  Winsiton  ea.       2.00 

Mary  Frances  cook  book.     641 

Mary  Frances  garden  book.     716 

Mary  Frances  housekeeper  book.     640 

Mary  Frances  sewing  book.     646 

An  attractive,  well  illustrated  series,  with  complete  directions  in  story 

form  that  can  be  easily  followed  by  small  children. 

(3-5) 

Hall,  A.  N.     Boy  craftsman.  Lothrop       2.50 

How  to  make  a  boy's  workshop;  how  to  handle  tools,  and  what  can  be 
made  with  them ;  how  to  start  a  printing  shop  and  conduct  an  amateur 
newspaper;  and  many  other  things.     Well  illustrated. — Pittsburgh. 
790  (6-8) 

♦Hall,  A.  N.     Carpentry  and  mechanics  for  boys.  Lothrop       2.50 

Over   seven   hundred   illustrations   and  working   drawings.      Directions 
for  making  many  articles  for  the  boy's  own  use,  household  furniture,  gar- 
den furnishings,  etc. 
684  (7-8) 

Hall,  A.  N.,  and  Perkins,  D.    Handicraft  for  handy  girls.    Lothrop       2.50 
Practical  directions  for  basketry,  china  painting,  table  decoration,  etc., 
with  chapters  on  outdoor  activities. 
790  (6-8) 

Hutton,  J.  G.    Things  to  make:  a  book  on  handwork  for  boys  and 

girls.  Mission.  Educ.  Movement        .6© 

790         (6-8) 

Johnson,  Constance.    When  mother  lets  us  cook.  Moffat       1.25 

641         (5-7) 

Johnson,  Constance.     When  mother  lets  us  help.  Moffat       1.25 

Simple  directions  easy  for  a  ten-year-old. 

640  (5-7) 

♦Judson,  C.  I.    Junior  cook  book.  Barse       1.25 

Starts  at  the  very  beginning  and  tells  just  how  to  cook  meat,  vege- 
tables, breads,  cookies  and  all  kinds  of  good  things  to  eat, 

641  (5-7) 

Kilbon,   B.  G.     Elementary  woodwork:    or,    Carpentry    for    boys. 

Lothrop       1.00 
Useful  to  a  boy  seeking  to  instruct  himself. 
684         (7-8) 

Klickmann,  Flora.    Little  girl's  knitting  and  crochet  book.    Stokes       1.25 
A  book  of  practical  directions  much  appreciated  by  small  knitters. 
646  (6-8) 


PHYSIOLOGY,    HEALTH,    AMUSEMENTS,  SPORTS  AND  GAMES  31 

Morgan,  M.  W.    How  to  dress  a  doll.  Altemus         .60 

Full  directions  with  patterns. 
646  (3-5) 

Polkinghorne,    R.   K.,  and    M.   I.    R.     Toy-making   in   school   and 

home.  Hubbell       2.00 

Shows  how  to   make  many  different  toys   from  inexpensive   materials. 
Includes  the  use  of  woodworking  tools. — ^Pittsburgh. 
790  (2-8) 

*  Sanford,   F.  G.     Art  crafts  for  beginners.  Century       1.75 

Design,  thin-wood  working,  pyrography,  sheet  metal  work,  leather  work, 
book-binding,  simple  pottery,  basketry,  beadwork. 
707.2  (7-8) 

Siepert,  A.  F.    Bird  houses  boys  can  build.  Manual  Arts  Press         .65 

Directions   for  building  houses  birds  can   and  have  occupied.     Many 
illustrations  and  drawings. 
790  (6-8) 

Thatcher,  Edward.    Making  tin  can  toys.  Lippincott      1.50 

Directions  for   making  mechanical   toys   and   useful   articles,    such   as 
trays  and  candlesticks.     Materials  required  are  plentiful  and  inexpensive, 
and  tools  needed  few  and  simple. — Pittsburgh. 
790  (6-8) 

Waterman,  A.  H.     Little  candy  book  for  a  little  girl.  Page       1.10 

641  (5-8) 

Waterman,  A.  H.    Little  preserving  book  for  a  little  girl.  Page       1.10 

641  (5-8) 

White,   Mary.     How  to  make  baskets.  Doubleday       1.50 

A  practical  guide,  giving  descriptions  of  the  materials  and  tools.     Many 
Illustrations. — ^Pittsburgh. 
689  (6-8) 

PHYSIOLOGY  AND  HEALTH. 

Cole,  N.  B.,  and  Ernst,  0.  H.     First  aid  for  boys.  Appleton       1.50 

Should  be  in  every  school  library. 
614.88  (6-8) 

Ferguson,  H.  W.    Child's  book  of  the  teeth.  World  Bk.         .52 

Story  of  the   "Grinder  Brigade."     An  attractive   and  instructive  book 
on  a  much  neglected  subject. 
617.6  (3-5) 

Fryer,  J.  E.    Mary  Frances'  first  aid  book.  Winston       1.25 

614.88  (4-6) 

•  Gulick,   Mrs.  C.  E.  V.         Emergencies.  Ginn         .64 

Directions  for  meeting  all  kinds  of  common  accidents,  emergencies,  etc. 
614.88  (6-8) 

Hutchinson,  Woods.     Child's  day.  Houghton         .76 

Tells  children  how  to  keep  well  and  strong. 
613  (3-5) 

AMUSEMENTS,  SPORTS  AND  GAMES. 

Adams,  J.  H.    Harper's  outdoor  book  for  boys.                          Harper       1.60 
Tells  how  to  make  wigwams,  aquariums,  pet  shelters,  kites,  aeroplanes, 
fishing-tackle,  etc. — Pittsburgh. 
790          (5-8) 
*Balch,   E.  B.     Amateur  circus  life.                                       Macmillan       1.60 
Illustrations  and  directions  for  simple  tumbling  and  acrobatic  feats. 
790          (6-8) 
Beard,  D.  C.    Boy  pioneers,  sons  of  Daniel  Boone.                Scribner       3.00 
Full  directions  for  organizing  and  carrying  on  a  Daniel  Boone  club, 
making    costumes,    fort,    camp,    furniture,    prairie    schooner,    etc.,    and 
for  celebrating  special  days. — ^A.  L.  A. 
796  (5-8)  ; 


32  AMUSEMENTS,   SPORTS   AND   GAMES 

Beard,  D.  C.    Field  and  forest  handy  book.  Scribner      S.OO 

Hunting,  fishing  and  camping  for  amateurs. 
796  (6-8) 

Beard,  D.  C.     Shelters,  shacks  and  shanties.  Scribner       1.75 

Over  fifty  plans  and  pictures  and  full  directions  for  making  everything 
in  the  line  of  shelter  for  Boy  Scouts. 
796.5  (6-8) 

Beard,  E.  P.    Jolly  book  of  fun  craft.  Stokes       2.00 

"With  some  paper,  some  crayons,  some  cardboard,  you  know, 
You  cut  and  you  color  and  make  a  game  so." 
790  (4-8) 

Bond,  A.  R.     Scientific  American  boy.  Munn       1.80 

Story  of  outdoor  life,  interesting,   entertaining.     Directions  given  for 
making  tents,  skates,  bridges,  canoes,  and  complete  practical  instructions 
for  camp  life. 
790  (6-8) 

Boy  Scouts  of  America.    American  Boy  Scout  manual  of  customs 

and  drills.  Published  by  the  society,     paper         .25 

The  oflficial  manual. 
796  (6-8) 

♦Boy  Scouts  of  America.    Handbook  for  boys.     Published  by  the 

society,     paper         .50 
Official  handbook.    Fine  reading  for  any  boy,  even  if  he  is  not  a  Scout. 

796  (6-8) 

Camp,  W.  C.     Football  without  a  coach.  Appleton       1.50 

797  (7-8) 

Camp  Fire  Girls.     Manual  of  activities  and  war  program  for  the 
girls  of  America.       Camp  Fire  Girls,  inc.,  31  East  17th  St. 

New  York         .50 
Handbook  of  organization. 
369.3  (7-8) 

Canfield,  D.  F.     What  shall  we  do  now?  Stokes       2M 

Directions  for  five  hundred  plays  and  pastimes.  Including  gardening, 
candy-making,  writing,  guessing  and  acting  games. 
793  (5-7) 

Carrington,  Hereward.     Boys'  book  of  magic.  Dodd       2.00 

All  round  good  collection  of  magic  tricks  with  additional  material  on 
side  show  and  animal  tricks. 
790  (6-8) 

*Clark,  E.  H.    Track  athletics  up  to  date.  DufCield       1.50 

797  (7-8) 

Collins,  A.  F.     Book  of  magic.  Appleton       1.50 

Illustrations  and  description  of  many  tricks  and  illusions. 
790  (5-7) 

Collins,  A.  F.     Magic  of  science.  Revell       1.50 

"A  book  of  scientific  amusements  which  can  be  performed  with  simple 
apparatus." 
530.7  (5-8) 

♦Currier,   H.  J.     Just  for  fun;   a  collection  of  games  and  enter- 
tainments for  use  in  the  home  and  church.  Amer.  Bapt.       1.00 
793         (3-8) 

Eastman,  C.  A.     Indian  scout  talks.  Little       1.25 

From  this  book  one  may  learn  how  to  make  friends  with  wild  animals ; 
how  to  build  Indian  canoes;  how  to  start  a  fire  without  matches   and 
cook  without  pots,  with  other  phases  of  Indian  woodcraft. 
796  (6-8) 

Glover,    E.    H.     "Dame   Curtsey's"   book   of   games   for   children. 

McClurg       1.00 
Games  for  indoors  and  out. 
793  (6-8) 


AMUSEMENTS,  SPORTS  AND  GAMES  33 

*<3rlnnell,  G.  B.  and  Swan,  E.  L.    Harper's  camping  and  scouting. 

Harper      1.60 
A  handbook  for  boy  campers.     Directions  for  every  necessary  prep- 
aration and  emergency. 
796  (6-8) 

Gulick,  Mrs.  C.  E.  V.    List  of  Indian  words  from  which  girls  can 

derive  their  Camp  Fire  names.  Camp  Fire  Girls,  inc.         .25 

369.3          (6-8) 

Handle/,  L.  de  B.     Swimming  and  watermanship.  Macmillan       1.50 

796  (7-8) 

Hofmann,  M.  C.     Games  for  everybody.  Dodge        .75 

Games  requiring  little  preparation. 
793  (5-8) 

Keene,  J.  H.    Boy's  own  guide  to  fishing,  tackle  making  and  fish 

breeding.  Lothrop       1.75 

799         (7-8) 

McGraw,  J.  J.    How  to  play  baseball.  Harper        .90 

Well  illustrated. 

797  (6-8) 

Mathiews,  F.  K.     Boy  Scouts'  year  book.  Appleton       2.50 

A  wealth  of   good   things   for  boys;   stories   by  prominent   writers   and 
special    articles    by    famous   men    of   America;    material   on    woodcraft, 
camping,  etc.  .• 

369.43          (6-8) 

'Rioe,  G.,  ed.    Boys'  book  of  sports.  Century       2.50 

Stories   of  outdoor  sports  told  by  famous  players,   selected  from   St. 
Nicholas. 
797  (6-8) 

Ripley,  G.  S.    Games  for  boys.  Holt      1.90 

Out  door  games,   indoor  games,   setting-up  exercises,   contests,  exhibi- 
tion exercises  and  camp  activities. 
713  (6-8) 

Seton,  E.  T.    Book  of  woodcraft  and  Indian  lore.  Doubleday      2.00 

Pathflnding,  use  of  compasses,   route  sketching,  packs,  marksmanship, 
shelters,  etc. 
796.5  (6-8) 

Wade,  M.  H.    Dolls  of  many  lands.  Wilde       1.50 

Stories  of  the  favorite  playmates  of  little  girls  everywhere. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

White,  Mary.    Book  of  games  with  directions  how  to  play  them. 

Scribner       1.25 
Games  of  all  kinds  for  all  occasions. 
793          (4-6) 

White,  S.  E.    Camp  and  trail.  Doubleday       2.00 

Stewart  Edward  White  makes  one  long  to  be  a  thorough  woodman. 
796  (6-8) 

Yale,  Mrs.  E.  D.    When  mother  lets  us  give  a  party.  MofCat      1.25 

790         (3-6) 
Young,    Martha.     Two   little   Southern   sisters   and   their   garden 

plays.  Hinds       1.25 

The  fun  two  little  girls  get  out  of  playing  with  the  flowers  in  their 
garden. 
790  (4-5) 


34  ART  ANI>  MUSIC 

ART  AND   MUSIC. 

Bacon,  M.  S.  H.    Pictures  that  every  child  should  know;  a  selec- 
tion of  the  world's  art  masterpieces  for  young  people. 

Grosset      l.OO 

750         (5-7) 
Bacon,  M.  S.  H.    Songs  that  every  child  should  know.       Grosset      1.00 
Words  and  melody  of  125  old  songs  selected  for  musical  quality,  some- 
times popularity,  or  as  reflecting  a  period  in  musical  development.— N.  i . 
784.8  (7-8) 

Cady,  M.  R.  and  Dewey,  J.  M.    Picture  stories  from  great  artists. 

Macmillan       1.00 
Text  and  illustrations  relate  to  the  work  of  Rosa  Bonheur,  Van  Dyck, 
Landseer  and  Murillo. 
750  (2-4) 

Chandler,  A.  C.     Magic  pictures  of  the  long  ago.  Holt       1.40 

Story  hour  stories  of  the  Metropolitan  museum. 
708.1  (5-7) 

Girl's  dream  of  pictures  and  paintings;  based  on  a  course 
in  art  appreciation.  Palmer        .20 

A  pageant  play  of  art. 
750  (6-8) 

Home,  O.  B.,  and  Scobey,  K.  L.    Stories  of  great  artists.     (Eclec- 
tic readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .56 

Stories  of  the  lives   of  eight  famous  artists  in   connection  with  the 
studies  of  their  work.     Simply  told  and  interesting. — Wisconsin. 
927  (4-5) 

Keysor,  J.  E.    Great  artists.     6  vols.  Educ.  Pub.  ea.        .75 

Vol.  I.      Raphael — Murillo — Rubens — Durer. 
Vol.  II.    Van  Dyck — Rembrandt — Reynolds — Bonheur. 
Vol.  III.  Angelo — Da  Vinci — Titian — Corregio. 
Vol.  IV.  Turner — Corot — Millais — Leighton. 
Vol.  V.    Giotto — Angelico — Reni — Del     Sarto  —  Albertinelli 

— Botticelli — Bartolommeo — Mantegna. 
Vol.  VI.  Valasquez — Millet — Breton — Landseer — Sargent. 

Abimdantly  and  beautifully  illustrated.     Material  interestingly  selected 
and  arranged,  and  not  easily  found  in  so  condensed  form  elsewhere. 
927  (7-8) 

Lawrence,  W.  M.,  and  Blackman,  0.,  comps.    Riverside  song  book 
containing  classic  American  poems  set  to  standard  music. 

Houghton         .56 
784.8         (6-8) 
Macy,  J.  C.    Young  people's  history  of  music:    Biography  of  fa- 
mous musicians,     (rev.  ed.)  Ditson 
A  treasure  house  of  information  on  all  forms  of  music;  also  contains 
biographies  of  twenty-three  representative  musicians. 
927.8          (7-8) 

Moore,  Maud.    What  the  pictures  say.  Educ.  Pub.        .7& 

Leads  little  children  into  an  acquaintance  with  some  of  the  master- 
pieces of  art  while  they  are  learning  to  read. 
750  (2-3) 

Mother  Goose.     Songs  from  Mother  Goose  for  voice  and  piano; 

set  to  music  by  Sidney  Homer,     (school  ed.)  Macmillan       1.20 

784.8         (1-2) 

Neidllnger,  W.  H.    Small  songs  for  small  singers.  Schirmer      2.00 

Simple  melodies  suited  to  children's  voices. 
784.8  (2-4) 

Ogden,  H.  A.,  comp.     Our  flag  and  our  songs.  Clode        .60 

Origin  and  history  of  the  U.  S.  flag,  with  eighteen  well-known  songs. 
784.8         (5-8) 


COLLEJCTIOlSrS  OF  LITERATURE,  READERS,  SPEAKERS       35 

Oliver,  M.  I.  G.    First  steps  in  the  enjoyment  of  pictures.  Holt       1.50 

750         (6-8) 

Powers,   E.   M.     Stories  of  famqus    pictures.       (EMucational    art 

readers.)     Book  I.  Educ.  Pub.         .75 

750         (1-3) 

Pray,  M.  L.     Motion  songs  for  public  schools.  Heath         .64 

Helpful  in  the  preparation  of  school  celebrations  and  in  physical  cul- 
ture work  with  small  children. — Wisconsin. 
784.8  (1-3) 

Ripley,  F.   H.,  and  Schneider,   Elizabeth.     Art-music  readers.     2 

bks.  Atkinson,  Mentz.     ea.         .50 

Creates  a  relation  between  music,  its  history  and  the  art  inspired  by  it. 
700  (5-8) 

Scobey,  K.  L.,  and'  Home,  O.  N.     Stories  of  great  musicians. 

(Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.   Bk.         .56 

927.8  (5-8) 

Slight  sketches  of  Bach,  Handel,  Mozart,  Haydn,  Beethoven,  Mendels- 
sohn, Chopin,  Schumann,   Schubert  and  Wagner. 

927.8  (5-8) 

Thayer,  Mrs.  E.  R.  L.     When  mother  lets  us  draw.  Moffat       1.25 

Principles  of  drawing  given  in  attractive  story  form,  with  illustrations. 
740  (4-7) 

Whitoomb,  I.  P.    Young  people's  story  of  art.  Dodd      3.50 

Written  to  bring  the  yoimg  reader  into  closer  friendship  with  art. 

750.9  (7-8) 

Whitcomb,  I.  P.    Young  people's  story  of  music.  Dodd       3.50  ■* 

Not  an  exhaustive  treatise,  but  one  any  musical  child  will  thoroughly 
enjoy. 
780.9  (7-8) 

COLLECTIONS  OF  LITERATURE,  READERS  AND  SPEAKERS. 

♦Alcott,  L.   M.     Louisa  May  Alcott  reader.  Little         .85 

Stories  from  Alcott. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

♦Bailey,  C.  S.  and  Lewis,  C.   M.     For  the  children's  hour.     3  vol. 

Bradley,     ea.         .60 
Admirably  selected  stories  for  klndergartners,   teachers,   and  mothers, 
covering  a  wide  variety  of  subjects. — ^A.  L.  A. 

Vol.  1.,  first  to  second  grade.     Vol.  2,  second  to  third.     Vol.  3,  third 
to  fourth. 
Fiction         (1-4) 

Bryce,  C.  T.  Play  time  primer. 

372.4  (2-3) 

Bryce,  C.  T.  Short  stories  for  little  people. 

372.4  (2-3) 

Bryoe,  C.  T.     That's  why  stories. 

Primers  that  have  beauty  and  interesting  little  stories. 
372.4  (2-3) 

Cumnock,  R.  M.     School  speaker.  McClurg      1.2f5 

A  good  speaker  for  children  in  the  grades. 
808.8         <5-8) 

♦Dickens,   Charles.     Dickens  reader,   comp.   by   E.   M.   Powers. 

Houghton         .56 
A  good  introduction  to  some  famous  characters  from  Dickens. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Dickinson,  A.  D.,  and  H.  W.    Children's  book  of  patriotic  stories. 

Doubleday       1.50 
Spirit  of  '76  stories. 
Fiction         (4-8) 


Newson 

.68 

Newson 

.68 

Newson 

.80 

36       COLX.BCTIONS  OF  LITERATURE,  READERS,  SPEAKERS 

Dickinson,  A.  D.,  and  H.  W.    Second  book  of  patriotic  stories;  the 

spirit  of  '61.  Doubleday       1.50 

Fiction         (5-8) 

Dickinson,  A.  D.,  and  Skinner,  A.  M.    Children's  book  of  Christmas 

stories.  Doubleday       1.50- 

Select   collection   of   children's   Christmas    stories,   each   fraught   with 
the  true  Christmas  spirit.     Children  of  all  ages  enjoy  it. 
Fiction         (4-7) 

Dier,  J.  C.     Children's  book  of  Christmas.  Macmillan       1.50 

Selections  from  different  writers  telling  of  the   Christmas  customs  of 
many  lands  and  times.    Also  contains  Christmas  poems  and  carols.     Color 
plates  and  other  illustrations. — ^Pittsburgh. 
394  (4-6) 

♦Field,  Eugene.     Eugene  Field  book,     (school  ed.)  Scribner         .72 

His  most  popular  poems,  with  some  letters  to  his  children  and  a  few 
prose  selections. — Oregon. 
811  (4-6) 

♦Field,  Eugene.    Eugene  Field  reader.  Scribner        .64 

Attractive   primer  with  text  and   pictures  based  upon   a   few   of   the 
most  popular  poems,  which  are  included.     Colored  pictures. 
811  (1-3) 

Fouike,  E.   E.     Twilight  stories.  Silver         .72 

Simple   stories  and   poems   for  the   children   to   read   for   themselves. 

— Oregon. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Hyde,  W.  D.     School  speaker  and  reader.  Ginn       1.20 

A  collection  of  modern,  live  literature  made  by  the  president  of  Bow- 
doin  college. — Oregon. 
808.8  (5-8) 

Kelman,  J.  H.    Stories  from  Chaucer.     (Told  to  the  children  ser.) 

Dutton       1.00 
Stories  of  Arviragus   and  Dorigen,   Palemon   and   Arcite,   the  patient 
Griselda,  and  Constance,  in  simple  prose. 
821  (5-6) 

♦Kipling,   Rudyard.     Kipling  reader  for  elementary  grades. 

Appleton         .SO' 
Selections  from  the  Jungle  book  and  Just  so  stories. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

♦Kipling,  Rudyard.     Kipling  reader  for  upper  grades.     Appleton        .S^ 
Short  stories  with  some  of  the  best  known  poems  and  ballads. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Lamb,  Charles,  and  Mary.    Tales  from  Shakespeare.     (Riverside 

literature  ser.)  Houghton         .80- 

822.33  (5-8) 

♦Lanier,  Sidney.     Lanier  book.     (School  reading.)  Scribner        .76 

Prose  and  poetry  selections. 
811  (5-7) 

♦Mabie,  H.  W.    Famous  stories  every  child  should  know.   Grosset       1.00 
Stories  from  Dickens,  Ruskin,  Hawthorne,  the  Bible,  Hale,  Ouida,  John 
Brown  and  Cowper. 
Fiction         (5-8) 

MacLeod,   Mary.     Shakespeare  story-book;   with  introduction  by 

Sidney  Lee.  Barnes       3.00 

Stories  of  sixteen  plays,  with  dialogue  in  words  of  dramas. 
822.33  (6-8) 

Menefee,  Maud.    Child  stories  from  the  masters.  Rand         .6<^ 

The  stories  of  Pippa,   Saul  and  David  from  Brovraing;  Mignon  and 
Margaret  from  Goethe ;  Beatrice  from  Dante ;  Siegfried  and  Parsifal  from 
Wagner.     Illustrated  with  reproductions  of  famous  paintings. 
Fiction        (4-7) 


COLLECTIONS  OF  LITERATURE,  READERS,  SPEAKERS       37 

Murray,  Clara.     Story  book  treasures.  Little      1.25 

About  fifty   treasures   from   the   story   books  of   childhood,   fable,   folk- 
tales, fairy  tales,  true  stories  of  heroism  and  adventures. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Murray,  Clara.     Storyland.     (Playtime  ser.)  Little      1.10 

A  good   collection  of   al>out  fifty   stories   and  poems  for  children  of 
eight  or  nine,  many  by  well  known  authors. — Wisconsin. 
372.4  (3-4) 

*Page,  T.  N.    Page  story  book.  Scribner        .72 

Fiction  (5-7) 

Plummer,  M.  W.     Stories  from  the  Chronicle  of  the  Cid.        Holt      1.00 
A    simple   and    spirited   version    conforming   to   modem   standards   of 
morality. 
398.38          (5-6) 

♦Riley,  J.  W.    James  Whitcomb  Riley  reader.  Bobbs       LOO 

811          (5-7) 

Roosevelt,    Theodore.      Roosevelt   book.      (School    readings.) 

Scribner        .80 
Contents :    The  good  citizen.  The  pioneer.  The  hero.  The  battle  of  San 
Juan  hill.  Hunting  wild  animals. 
917.8  (6-7) 

Scudder,  H.  E.    Children's  book.  Houghton       5.00 

169  illustrations  and  a  treasure  trove  of  the  best  in  children's  literature. 
808.8          (4-5) 

♦Scudder,  H.  E.    Verse  and  prose  for  beginners  in  reading.     (Riv- 
erside literature  ser.)  Houghton        .44 
Old  rhymes,  proverbs  and  simple  poems. 
372.4          (1-2) 

Shurter,  E.  D.    Winning  declamations — how  to  speak  them;     Pt. 

I,  for  intermediate  and  grammar  grades.  Noble       2.00 

808.8          (6-8) 
Skinner,  A.  M.,  and'  E.  L.,  oomps.     Pearl  story  book;   stories  and 

legends  of  winter,  Christmas,  and  New  Years  Day.     Duffield       2.00 

Fiction          (5-7) 
Skinner,  A.  M.,  and  E.  L.,  comps.     Topaz  story  book;   stories  and 

legends  of  autumn,  Halloween  and  Thanksgiving,     Duffield       2.00 

Fiction          (5-7) 

Skinner,  A.  M.  and  E.  L.,  comps.    Turquoise  story  book.     Duffield       2.00 
A  compilation  of  stories  and  legends  about  summer  and  nature.     Both 
poetry  and  prose  are  included. 
Fiction          (4-5) 

♦Skinner,  E.  L.,  and  A.   M.,  comps.     Happy  tales  for  story  time 

Amer.  Bk.         .72 
Contents:  .Animal   tales;    Grandmother's   tales;   Tales    of   Christmas; 
Folk  tales  and  fables;  Wonder  tales. 
398  (2-3) 

Smith,  E.  S.,  oomp.    Good  old  stories  for  boys  and  girls;  pictures 

by  L.  J.  Bridgman.  Lothrop       2.00 

Selections   from    Ruskin,   Jean    Ingelow,    Bjomson,    Phoebe    Cary    and 
others. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Smith,  E.  S.,  com  p.    Mystery  tales  for  boys  and  girls.        Lothrop      2.00 
A  combination  of  thrills  and  good  literature  for  mystery-craving  boys 
and  girls  and  adults. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Smith,  E.  S.,  comp.    Peace  and  patriotism;  selections  from  poetry 

and  prose.  Lothrop       2.00 

Contents:    Patriotism;   Peace   and   international   good   will;   National 
songs  of  other  lands;  Service. 
808.8  (6-8) 


38 


POETRY  AND  PLAYS 


*8tevenson,  R.  L.    Robert  Louis  Stevenson  reader,  ed.  by  Cath- 
erine T.  Bryce,  Scribner         M 

Illustrated  in  colors. 
8Z1  (2-3) 

Whittier,  J.  G.    Selections  from  "Child  life  in  poetry,"  and  "Child 

life  in  prose."     (Riverside  literature  ser.)  Houghton         .5S 

Poems  and  stories  from  the  collections  edited  by  Whittier.    The  classics 
of  English  and  American  literature. — Oregon. 

821.08  (5-8) 

Wright,  H.  C.    Children's  stories  in  American  literature.     (School 

reading.)     2  vol.  Scribner.     ea.         .76: 

Vol.  1.     1660-1861.       Vol.  2.     1861-1896. 

▲bout  the  lives  and  literary  works  of  the  foremost  American  authors. 
Well  written. — Oregon. 

810.9  (7-8) 

POETRY  AND  PLAYS. 


Children's  first  book  of  poetry. 
(1-2) 

Children's  second  book  of  poetry. 
(2-3) 

Children's  third  book  of  poetry. 
(3-4) 


Amer. 

Bk. 

.6» 

Amer. 

Bk. 

.60 

Amer. 

Bk. 

.60 

Baker,  E.  K. 

821.08 

Baker,  E.  K. 

821.08 

Baker,  E.  K. 

8ZL08 

Baldwin,  James,  ed.  Nine  choice  poems  of  Longfellow,  Lowell, 
Macaulay,  Byron,  Browning  and  Shelley,  with  introductory 
sketches  and  notes.  Amer.  Bk.         .52^ 

Included  because  of  the  useful  introduction  to  each  poem. 
811.08  (7-8) 

Burt,  M.  E.    Poems  that  every  child  should  know:   a  selection  of 

the  best  poems  of  all  times  for  young  people.  Grosset       1.00 

Arranged  in  groups  for  children  of  different  ages. 
821.08  (3-8) 

Carter,  E.  H.    Christmas  candles:  plays  for  boys  and  girls.     Holt       1.50 
Twelve  Christmas  plays  written  for  the  boys  and  girls  of  a  small  Sun- 
day school. 
812  (5-8) 

Chisholm,  Louey.    Golden  staircase;  poem's  for  children.    Putnam      2.50 
Good  selections  of  200  poems,  so  arranged  that  the  child  may  progress 
from  simple  to  more  mature  verse. 
821.08  (3-8) 

D«  la  Mare,  W.  J.     Peacock  Pie.  Holt       2.25 

As  delightful  in  poetry  as  "Alice  in  Wonderland"  Is  in  prose. 
811         (4-6) 

Dodge,  M.  M.     Rhymes  and  jingles.  Scribner       1.75 

Poetry   written   for  children  by   the   late   editor   of   the    St.   Nicholas 
magazine. 
811  (2-3) 

Dodge,  M.  M.    When  life  is  young.  Century       1.75 

A  collection  of  verse  for  little  boys  and  girls.     Itfany  appeared  orig- 
inally in  St.  Nicholas. 
811  (2-3) 

Dunn,  F.  W.    What  shall  we  play?    A  dramatic  reader.     (Every- 

child's  ser.)  Macmillan         .8«^ 

372.4         (3-4) 
Field,   Eugene.     Lullaby-land;    songs  of  childhood.     Selected  by 

Kenneth  Grahame;   illus.  by  Charles  Robinson.         Scribner       1.75 

811         (3-5) 


POETRlr  AND  PLAYS  3^ 


Gould,  E.  L.    "Little  Women"  play.  Little       l.OO 

Adapted  from  Alcott's  "Little  women." 
793.1  (7-8) 

Hall,  M.  L.,  and  Palmer,  S.  E.    Story  plays  for  little  children  with 

music,   finger  plays   and   rhythms.  Lothrop       1.50 

372.4         (1-2) 
Hazard,  Bertha,  comp.     Three  years  with  the  poets.     Houghton         .9ft 
Well   chosen   selections   of   poems   for   memorizing   in   the   first    three 
grades.     Arranged  by  months. — ^A.  L.  A. 
821.08  (1-3) 

Hix,  M.    Approved  selections  for  reading  and  memorizing.    Hinds 

Vol.  I.  .12 

808.8         (1-2) 

Vol.  n.  .72 

808.8  (2-3) 

Holmes,  O.  W.     Grandmother's  story  of  Bunker  Hill  battle. 

Houghton         .44 
The  poems,  patriotic  and  humorous,  come  close  to  the  understanding 
and  sympathies  of  boys  and  girls. 

811  (7-8) 

Hope,  W.  G.    Friends  in  Bookland:  a  play  for  boys  and  girls. 

Macmillan         .60 
Suitable  for  the  observance  of  Children's  Book  Week. 

812  (5-7) 

Ingpen,  Roger.     One  thousand  poems  for  children.  Jacobs       2.50 

A  good  collection  for  the  child's  own  use. 
821.08  (7-8) 

Johnston,    E.    L.,    and    Barnum,    M.    D.     Book   of   plays   for   little 

actors.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

Simple   plots   designed   for   acting    or   reading   in   school.      A  play   is 
provided  for  Washington's  and  Lincoln's  birthdays  and  for  other  national 
holidays. — A.  L.  A. 
372.4  (2-4) 

Longfellow,   H.  W.     Complete    poetical    works.     (Household    ed.) 

Houghton       2.7& 
The  children's  poet. 
811  (6-8) 

Longfellow,   H.  W.     Evangeline.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton        .44 
The  best  edition  for  schoolroom  use. 
811  (7-8) 

Longfellow,  H.  W.    Song  of  Hiawatha.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

ECoughton         .Se 
The  best  school  library  edition  of  the  poem.    Frederic  Remington's  illus- 
trations add  to  the  attractiveness  of  the  volume. — Oregon. 
811  (4-6) 

Longfellow,  H.  W.,  and  others.  Evangeline;  Snowbound,  and  oth- 
er poems  by  Whittier;  Vision  of  Sir  Launfal  and  other 
poems  by  Lowell.     (Riverside  literature  ser.)  Houghton        .80s 

An  excellent  library  volume. 
811  (6-8) 

Lowell,  J.  R.    Vision  of  Sir  Launfal.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton        .44 
The  volume  contains  seventeen  other  poems  and  a  sketch  of  Lowell. 
811  (7-8) 

Lucas,  E.  V.    Book  of  verses  for  children.     (Popular  ed.)         Holt      1.00 
A  collection  of  old  proverbs,  nonsense  rhymes,  quaint  old  verses  and 
other  story-poems. — Pittsburgh. 
821.08  (2-4) 

♦Lutkenhaus,  A.  M.    Plays  for  school  children.  Century       1.7^ 

Useful    collection    of    twenty    plays,    prepared    by    practical    teachers. 
Of  great  value  for  school  purposes. 
793.1  (5-8) 


40  POETRY  AND  PLAYS 

Mackay,  C.  D.    House  of  the  heart  and  other  plays  for  children. 

Holt       1.Z5 
Ten  one-act  plays  for  children,  suitable  for  school  and  church  enter- 
tainments.    Full  directions  for  dramatic  action,   settings   and   costiunes 
are  given  with  each  play. — A.  L.  A. 
812  (5-6) 

Mackay,  C.   D.     Patriotic  plays  and  pageants   for  young  people. 

Holt       1.40 
Contains    one-act    plays.      Full    directions    for    costumes,    dances    and 
music.     Each  play  deals  with  the  youth  of  some  American  hero. 
812  (5-6) 

Mackay,   C.    D.     Silver   thread,   and   other  folk   plays   for   young 

people.  Holt       1.25 

812  (5-6) 

Macaulay,   T.   B.     Lays  of  ancient   Rome.      (Riverside   literature 

ser.)  Houghton         .44 

Good  edition  of  these  stirring  hero  poems. — Oregon. 

821  (7-8) 

Matthews,  J.  B.     Poems  of  American  patriotism.     (School  read- 
ings.) Scribner         .76 

Poems  which  depict  feelings  as  well  as  those  which  describe  action. 
A  collection  of  old  favorites.    Annotated. — Oregon. 
811.08  (4-8) 

Mintz,   F.  S.     Story  hour  plays.  Rand         .80 

793         (4-5) 

Olcott,  F.  J.    Story-telling  poems.  Houghton       1.50 

Selected  and  arranged  for  story-telling,  reading  aloud  and  for  the  chil- 
dren's own  reading. 
821.08  (1-8) 

Repplier,  Agnes,  comp.    Book  of  famous  verse.     (Riverside  library 

for  young  people.)  Houghton       1.10 

A  very  good  collection.    Many  of  the  selections  are  of  an  heroic  nature. 
821.08  (6-8) 

St.  Nicholas  book  of  plays  and  operettas:   first  ser.  Century       1.50 

Popular  plays  and  operettas  which  have  been  published  in  St.  Nicholas. 
793.1  (6-7) 

Scott,  Sir  Walter.     Lady  of  the  Lake.     (Pocket  classics.) 

Macmillan         .48 
821         (7-8) 

Seeflmiller,  Wilhelmina.     Little  rhymes  for  little  readers.       Rand        .75 
Simple  verses  with  a  touch  of  humor. 
811  (3-5) 

Shute,  K.  H.    Land  of  song;  ed.  by  Larkin  Dutton.     3  vol.    Silver 

Vol.  1.  .76 

Vol.  2  .80 

Vol.  3  .92 

A  very  good  selection. 
82L08  (3-8) 

Skinner,  A.   M.     Dramatic  stories  for  reading  and  acting. 

Amer.   Bk.         .60 
Fables,  fairy  stories  and  legends. 
372.4         (3-5) 

Skinner,  A.  M.     Story  land  in  play.  Rand         .80 

372.4         (1-2) 

Skinner,  A.  M.,  and  Lawrence,   L.  N.     Little  dramas  for  primary 

srrades.  Amer.  Bk.        .60 

372.4  (1-2) 


I 


POETRY  AND  PLAYS  41 

*Skinner,  A.  M.,  and  Wickes,  F.  G.,  comps.     Child's  own  TDook  of 

verse.     Book  I.  Macmillan         .80 

Contains  over  100  rhymes  and  poems,  including  selections  fro'm  Steven- 
son, Kate  Greenavpay,  Jean  Ingelow,  Eugene  Field  and  others. — Children's 
Catalogue. 
821.08  (1-2) 

Skinner,  E.  L.,  and  A.  M.    Children's  plays.  Appleton       1.00 

Thirteen   short  plays   with   directions  for   stage   setting   and   costumes. 
Useful  for  holiday  programs. 
793.1  (7-8) 

Smith,   M.   N.  A.     Plays,  pantomimes  and  tableaux  for  Children. 
^  Moffat       1.75 

I  Suggestions  for  staging  and  costuming  make  this  a  very  practical  book 

for  home  and  school  purposes.     Several  Christmas  tableaux  are  included. 
793.1  (5-7) 

Stevenson,  B.  E^  and  E.  B.,  comps.  Days  and  deeds;  a  book  of 
verse  for  children's  reading  and  speaking.  2  vol.  "Poetry" 
and  "Prose."  Doubleday.     ea.       1.60 

All  national  holidays  and  days  of  special  observance  are  represented. 
821.08  (7-8) 

V  *Stevenson,  B.  E.    Home  book  of  verse  for  young  people.         Holt       2.75 
Illustrated  by  Willy  Pogany. 

If  you  can  afford  only  one  poetry  collection  for  the  children,  buy  this. 

—Book  Shelf 
821.08  (5-8) 

Stone,  Millicent.     Bankside  costume  book  for  children.     Saalfield       1.00 
793.1  (6-8) 

Tennyson,  Alfred,  Lord.    Poetic  and  dramatic  works.     (Household 

ed.)  '  Houghton       2.75 

This  volume  is  Included  for  children  in  the  belief  that  "a  taste  of  a 
great  thought  is  far  better  than  the  full  comprehension  of  a  small  one." 
821  (7-8) 

Thacher,  Mrs.  L.  W.     Listening  child.  Macmillan       1.20 

Poems  which  appeal  to  young  children,  though  not  written  for  them. 
821.08  (6-7) 

Walker,  A.  J.     Little  plays  from  American  history.  Holt       1.40 

LaPayette,  Lincoln,  Coliunbus,  etc.  in  brief  plays  for  children. 
793.1  (6-8) 

Wickes,  F.  G.    Child's  book  of  holiday  plays. 

Nine  plays  for  special  days,  Valentine,  May  day,  etc. 
793.1  (3-7) 

Wickes,  F.  G.     Stories  to  act. 
793          (3-4) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.     Bird's  Christmas  carol. 
Dramatic  version  of  a  favorite. 
793.1  (7-8) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Snnith,  N.  A.,  comps.    Golden  numbers. 

Doubleday       1.75 
821.08          (3-5) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Smith,  N.  A.,  comps.     "Pinafore  palace." 

Doubleday       1.75. 
821.08 

Wiggin,  K.  D.,  and  Smith,  N.  A.,  comps.     Posy  ring.     Doubleday       1.75- 
Attractive  volumes  of  verse,  well  selected. 
821.08  (3-5) 


Macmillan 

.80 

Rand 

.80 

Houghton 

A% 

) 


42  FICTION 

FICTION. 

Aanrud,  Hans.    Lisbeth  Longfrock.  Ginn         .64 

Home  life  in  Norway. 
Fiction         (6-7) 
Abbott,  Jacob.     Boy  on  a  farm.  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

Edited  by  Clifton  Johnson  from  RoUo  at  work  and  RoUo  at  play. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Abbott,  Jane.     Larkspur.  Lippincott       1.75 

Merry,  wholesome  Girl  Scout  story. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Alcott,  L.  M.     Eig-ht  cousins.  Little       1.75 

Fiction         (5-6) 

Alcott,  L.  M.    Jack  and  Jill.  Little       1.75 

This  story  shows  the  possibility  of  hearty,  sensible  boy  and  girl  friend- 
ship. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Alcott,  L.  M.     Jo's  boys.  Little       1.75 

A  sequel  to  "Little  men." 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Alcott,  L.  M.     Little  men.  Little       1.75 

Life  at  Plumfleld  with  Jo's  boys. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

*Alcott,  L.  M.    Little  women.  Little       1.75 

The  best  of  home  stories  for  growing  girls. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Alcott,  L.  M.    Lulu's  library.     3  vol.  Little,     ea.       1.65 

A  mixture  of  fairy  tales,  animal  stories  and  adventures  of  little  boys 
and  girls. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Alcott,  L.  M.    Old-fashioned  girl.  Little       1.75 

Fiction         (6-8) 

Alcott,  L.  M.     Under  the  lilacs.  Little       1.75 

Bab  and  Betty  in  the  old  house  under  the  lilacs. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Aldrich,  T.  B.     Marjorie  Daw,  and  other  stories.     (Riverside  lit- 
erature ser.)  Houghton         .48 

Charming  short  stories. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Aldrich,  T.  B.    Story  of  a  bad  boy.  Houghton        .80 

"Well,  not  such  a  very  bad  boy." 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Ames,  J.  H.    Mystery  of  Ram  Island.  Century      1.75 

A  story  of  Boy  Scouts  and  their  principles,  very  interesting  to  boys. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Ashmun,  M.  E.     Isabel  Carleton's  year.  Macmillan       1.90 

Good  story  of  home  and  school  life. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Ashmun,  M.  E.    Stephen's  last  chance.  Macmillan       1.75 

Well  written  story. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Barbour,   R.   H.     Half-back.  Appleton      1.75 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Baylor,  E.  M.  H.    Little  prospector.  Lothrop       1.50 

The   unusual,    but    not    impossible,    experiences    of    an    eight-year-old 

Nevada  pioneer. — A.  L.  A. 

Fiction         (4-5) 

Baylor,  F.  C.    Juan  and  Juanita.  Houghton       2.50 

The  story  of  two  little  Mexican  children  captured  by  the  Indians. 
Fiction         (4-5) 


FICTION  43 

Bennett,  John.     Barnaby  Lee.  Century      1.90 

Good  adventure  story  of  the  early  settlement  of  New  York. 
Fiction          (6-8) 
*Bennett,  John.     Master  Skylark.  Century       1.90 

The  story  of  a  little  lad  who  sang  his  way  to  London  Town  and  into 
the  hearts  of  the  people,  among  whom  was  Will  Shakespeare. 
I  Fiction         (7-8) 

'^ Benson,  E.  F.     David  Blaize  and  tiie  blue  door.  Doran       2.00 

A  fanciful  tale  of  a  little  boy  who  has  adventures  in  a  new  wonderland. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Blackmore,  R.  D.    Lorna  Doone.     (Luxembourg  illus.  ed.)    Crowell       2.50 
A  romance  of  Exmoor  and  the  outlaws  in  the  forest. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Blackmore,  R.  D.     Lorna  Doone.     A  romance  of  Exmoor.     Illus. 

by  Helen  M.  Grose.  Jacobs       2.50 

Eight  full  page  illustrations  in  color. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Brooks,  E.  S.     Master  of  the  Strong  Hearts.  Dutton       2.00 

Custer's  last  rally  in  the  valley  of  the  Little  Big  Horn  told  as  a  tale  of 
adventure  for  boys. 
Fiction         (7-8) 
Brooks,   Noah.     Boy  emigrants,     (cheaper  ed.)  Scribner       1.50 

Adventures  in  California  in  '49er  days. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Brooks,  Noah.    Boy  settlers.     (Scribner's  ser.  for  young-  people.) 

Scribner       1.50 
Story  of  the  settlement  of  Kansas. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Brown,  A.  F.     John  of  the  woods.  Houghton       1.75      •• 

Charming  poetic  story  of  a  boy  txmibler  who  escapes  from  cruel  masters 
and   lives   in   the   forest  with  a   hermit,   making  friends   with   the   wild 
beasts. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Brown,  A.  F.     Lonesomest  doll.  Houghton       1.25 

A  fanciful  story  of  a  lonely  little  queen  and  her  porter's  happy  little 
daughter. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Brown,  E.  A.    At  the  butterfly  house.  Lothrop       1.75 

Happy  times  at  home  and  school. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Brown,   H.  D.     Her  sixteenth  year.  Houghton       1.50 

Girls  will  like  this  prettily  told  story  of  Phoebe  Gay  growing  up.    Their 
elders  may  suspect  she  attempted  and  achieved  too  much. — N,  Y. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Brown,  H.  D.    Little  Miss  Phoebe  Gay.  Houghton       1.50 

Adventures  of  a  little  New  England  girl.  Prettily  bound  and  illustrated. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Buckley,  E.  F.     Children  of  the  dawn.     (Fine  art  juveniles.) 

Stokes       2.54 
Tales  of  old  Greece. 
Fiction  (6-8) 

Burgess,  T.  W.    Boy  Scouts  of  Woodcraft  Camp.  Penn       1.7S 

A  great  deal  of  woodcraft,  canoeing,  hunting  and  other  exciting  adven- 
tures. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Burnett,  F.  H.    Little  Lord  Fauntleroy;  illus.  by  Reginald  Birch. 

Scribner      l.St 
The  story  lacks  strength  and  character,  but  is  included  for  its  beautiful 
and  kindly  spirit. — Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Burnett,  F.  H.    Little  princess.  Scribner       3.00 

The  story  of  "Sara  Crewe"  with  twelve  full-page  illustrations  in  color. 
Fiction         (4-6) 


44  FICTION 

Burnett,  F.  H.     Sara  Crewe.     (Scribner's  ser.  for  young  people.) 

Scribner       1.50 
A  cheaper  edition,  under  another  name,  of  "The  little  princess."    Girls 
find  this  story  intensely  interesting. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

*Burnett,  F.  H.  Secret  garden.  Stokes   2.00 

Grosset       1.00 
The  hours  spent  in  rescuing  the  secret  garden  from  a  state  of  wild- 
ness  are  the  means  of  redeeming  the  lives  of  two  lonely  selfish  English 
children. — Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Canfield,  F.  A.    Refugee  family.  Harcourt      1.75 

Hardships  of  a  little  girl  and  her  family  in  the  midst  of  war. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Channon,  F.  E.    An  American  boy  at  Henley.  Little       1.75 

Story  of  a  boy's  first  year  in  an  English  public  school.     British  school 
traditions,  sports  and  slang  affords  an  interesting  contrast  to  our  own 
school  life. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Cervantes -Saavedra,  Miguel  d'e.    Don  Quixote  de  la  Mancha,  retold 

from  the  translations  of  Duffield  and  Shelton,  by  Mary  E. 

Burt  and  Lucy  L.  Cable.  Scribner        .76 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Cervantes-Saavedra,  Miguel  de.    Don  Quixote  de  la  Mancha,  retold 

by  Judge  Perry  and  illus.  in  color  by  Walter  Crane.  Lane       2.50 

An  attractive  edition  of  this  famous  Spanish  classic. 

Fiction         (7-8) 

Church,  A.  J.    Three  Greek  children;  a  story  of  home  in  old  time 

Greece,   with   illustrations   after   Flaxman   and   the   antique. 

(Knickerbocker  ser.)  Putnam       1.50 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Church,  A.  J.     Young  Macedonian  in  the  army  of  Alexander  the 

Great.      (Knickerbocker   ser.)  Putnam       1.50 

Useful  for  stimulating  Interest  in  ancient  history. — Oregon. 

Fiction         (7-8) 

Cobb,  B.  B.    Anita.  Lothrop       1.50 

Story  of  life  during  a  Colorado  summer.    Many  illustrations. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Collins,  A.  F.     Jack  Heaton,  wireless  operator.  Stokes       1.75 

Fiction         (7-8) 

Coolidge,  Susan.     Cross  Patch  and  other  stories.  Little       1.75 

Adapted  from  the  myths  of  Mother  Goose. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Coolidge,  Susan.     Eyebright.  Little       1.75 

A  little  girl  keeps  house  for  her  father  on  a  lonely  island. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Coolidge,  Susan.     What  Katy  did.  Little       1.75 

The  story  of  a  little  girl  who  learned  patience  and  endurance. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Cooper,  J.   F.     Deerslayer.      (Mohawk   ed.)  Putnam       2.00 

First  voliune  of  the  adventures  of  Leatherstocklng. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Cooper,  J.  F.    Last  of  the  Mohicans.     (Mohawk  ed.)  Putnam       2.00 

The  favorite  story  of  adventure  with  the  Indians  in  colonial  days.     A 
tale  of  the  French  and  Indian  war. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Cooper,  J.  F.    Pathfinder.     (Mohawk  ed.)    "  Putnam       2.00 

Third  in  the  series.     The  hero  reappears  in  the  war  of  1756  in  company 
with  his  Mohican  friend. — Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (7-8) 


FICTION  45 

Cooper,  J.  F.    Pioneers.    (Mohawk  ed.)  Putnam       2.00 

Fourth  in  the  series  of  Leatherstocking  tales. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Cooper,  J.  F.    Prairie.     (Mohawk  ed.)  Putnam       2.00 

This  book  closes  the  career  of  Leatherstocking. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Cotes,  Mrs.  E.    Story  of  Sonny  Sahib.  Appleton       1.75 

An  English  boy  becomes  a  friend  of  a  Maharajah. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Crownfield,  Gertrude.     Little  tailor  of  the  winding  way.     (Open- 
ing door  ser.)  Macmillan         .80 

A  pretty  mediaeval  story,  well  told. 
Fiction          (6-7) 

Curtis,  A.  T.    Little  maid  of  Province  town.  Penn       1.50 

A  little  girl's  life  in  Revolutionary  times. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Dana,  R.   H.     Two  years  before  the  mast.     (Riverside  literature 

ser.)  Houghton       1.92 

Best  description  ever  written  of  the  life  of  a  sailor. 
910.4  (7-8) 

♦Davis,  R.  H.    Boy  scout,  and  other  stories  for  boys.         Scribner       1.00 
Reprinted  from  other  collections  of  Richard  Harding  Davis'  stories. 
Fiction         (8) 

Day,  H.  F.    Eagle  Badge;  or,  TheSkokums  of  Allagash.       Harper       1.60 
Spirited  story  of  the  river  drivers  in  the  Maine  liunber  camps. 

— Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Defoe,  Daniel,     Robinson  Crusoe.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton         .92 
An  excellent  edition  for  teachers  and  school  use. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

*Defoe,  Daniel.     Robinson  Crusoe.  Educ.  Pub.         .60 

This  famous  old  book  abridged  and  simplified  by  Mary  Godolphin. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Defoe,  Daniel.    Robinson  Crusoe,     illus.  by  Noel  Pocock.    (Golden 

books  for  children.)  McKay       1.50 

Fiction         (5-8) 

Deland,  E.  D.     Katrina,  Wilde       1.75 

A  summer  on  a  New  England  farm. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Deland,  E.  D.     Oakleigh.  Harper       1.60 

Unaffected  story,  with  sentiment,  but  no  sentimentality,  for  girls  just 
entering  the  novel-reading  period. — Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Deland,  E.  D.     Successful  venture.  Wilde       1.75 

Story  of  how  four  plucky  girls  and  their  younger  brother  earn  their 
own  living. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Dickens,  Charles.     Christmas  carol.      (King's  treasuries  of  liter- 

ture.)  Button         .70 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Dickens,  Charles.    Christmas  carol,  and  The  cricket  on  the  hearth. 

(Pocket  classics.)  Macmillan        .48 

A  school  edition.     "The  cricket  on  the  hearth"  is  the  best  work  of 

Dickens  to  begin  with. 

Fiction         (7-8) 

Dickens,  Charles.     Story  of  little  Nell.     (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.         .68 
From  "Old  Curiosity  Shop,"  abridged  but  not  rewritten. — Oregon. 
Fiction         (7-8) 


46  FICTION 

Dickens,  Charles.    Twelve  Christmas  stories;  ed.  by  Jane  Gordon. 

(Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .68 

We  always  think  of  the  Christmas  spirit  in  connection  with  Dickens. 
Fiction         (7-8) 
Dix,  B.  M.     Little  captive  lad.  Macmillan       2.25 

Story  of  a  Cavalier  boy  and  his  life  with  his  Roundhead  half-brother. 
Good  picture  of  the  life  of  the  time  in  England. — Oregon. 
Fiction         (7-8) 
Dix,  B.  M.     Merrylips.  Macmillan       2.25 

Another  story  of  the  Puritan  rebellion.     The  story  is  excellent  in  at- 
mosphere and  plot. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (6-7) 
Dix,  B.  M.     Soldier  Rigdale.  Macmillan       2.25 

About  a  boy  who  came  over  in  the  Mayflower,  how  Miles  Standish 
defended  him  and  what  he  saw  among  the  Indians. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Dodge,  M.  M.     Donald  and  Dorothy.  Century       1.75 

A  picture  of  happy  home  life  and  an  interesting  plot. 
Fiction         (5-6) 
*  Dodge,   M.  M.     Hans  Brinker.  Scribner        .64 

This  famous  story  of  Dutch  life  Is  very  true  to  Dutch  character,  as 
well  as  to  Dutch  landscapes  and  customs. 
Fiction         (5-7) 
Dodge,  M.  M.    Land  of  pluck.  Century       1.76 

Short  stories  about  Holland. 
Fiction         (4-7) 

Doubleday,  Russell.     Cattle-ranch  to  college.  Doubleday       1.60 

True  story  of  a  Dakota  boy. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Doyle,  Conan.     Sherlock  Holmes.  Grosset       1.00 

Fiction         (7-8) 

Dudley,  A.  T.    Following  the  ball.     (Phillips  Exeter  ser.)     Lothrop       1.75 
Other  books  in  this  series  are :    "In  the  line,"    "With  mask  and  mitt," 
and  "A  fullback  afloat."     Straightforward,  interesting  stories  of  school 
and  football. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Duncan,    Norman.     Adventures   of  Billy   Topsail.  Revell       1.76 

Story  of  the  adventures  of  the  son  of  a  Newfoundland  fisherman. 

—A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Duncan,  Norman.     Billy  Topsail  and  company.  Revell       1.76 

Story  of  the  adventures  of  a  group  of  boys  in  a  Newfoimdland  fishing 
village.     Toilows  Adventures  of  Billy  Topsail. — A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Dyer,  W.  A.     Sons  of  liberty.  Holt       1.75 

A  story  of  Paul  Revere  from  boyhood  through  the  Revolution. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

*Eggleston,  Edward.     Hoosier  school-boy.     (School  reading.) 

Scribner        .72 
Tale  of  school  life  in  the  backwoods  of  Indiana  fifty  years  ago. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Elliot,  George,  pseud.     Mill  on  the  floss.     (Luxembourg  illus,  ed.) 

Crowell       2.50 
The  author's  own  childhood  is  reflected  in  this  famous  book. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Ewing,  J.  H.     Jackanapes,  and  The  brownies.     (Riverside  liter- 
ature ser.)  Houghton         .44 

A  story  exquisitely  told,  of  a  mischievous,  true-hearted  boy  who  dies 
in  battle  in  early  manhood  to  save  the  life  of  a  comrade. — Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Finnemore,  John.    Wolf  patrol.  Macmillan      1.60 

Lively  stories  of  the  adventures  of  five  English  Boy  Scouts. 
Fiction         (6-8) 


FICTION  47 

Fitzhugh,  P.  K.    For  Uncle  Sam,  boss.  Crowell      1.50 

Fiction         (6-8) 

Fitzhugh,  P.  K.    In  the  path  of  LaSalle.  Crowell      1.50 

Two  Boy  Scout  stories  which  concern  the  same  group  at  the  Panama 
canal  and  on  the  Mississippi,  respectively. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Fletcher,  M.  E.  B.     Old  settler  tales.     (Everychild's  ser.) 

Macmillan         .80 
Adventures  of  pioneer  children. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Freeman,  M.  E.    (Wilkins).     In  colonial  times.  Lothrop        .75 

Adventure  of  Ann,  the  bound  girl. 
Fiction         (5-8) 

French,  H.  W.    Lance  of  Kanana;  a  story  of  Arabia.  Lothrop      1.25 

Fiction         (6-7) 

Frentz,  E.  W.    Uncle  Zeb  and  his  friends,     (school  ed.)       Atlantic 

Monthly         .90 
The  stories  are  from  nature,  pioneering.  Civil  War  days,  and  everyday 
affairs.    Illustrated  with  many  drawings. — Bkl. 
Fiction         (4-5) 
Grey,  Zane.    Young  forester.  Harper       1.60 

Story  of  the  adventures  of  a  boy  who  goes  to  Arizona  to  join  a  friend, 
a  government  ranger,  in  the  forestry  service. — A.  L.  A. 
Fiction          (7-8) 

Grinnell,  G.  B.    Jack,  the  young  ranchman;  or,  A  boy's  adventures 

tures  in  the  Rockies.  Stokes       1.7& 

A  New  York  boy's  six  months  on  a  western  ranch,  where  he  learns  to 
ride  and  shoot,  collects  Indian  relics,  etc. 
Fiction          (6-8) 

Grinnell,  G.  B.    Jack  among-  the  Indians;  or,  A  boy's  summer  on 

the  buffalo  plains;    illus.  by  E.  W.  Deming.  Stokes       1.7& 

Information  about  Indians,  authoritative,  and  boy's  adventures,  stirring, 

— N.  Y. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Grinnell,  G.  B.    Jack  in  the  Rockies.  Stokes       1.75 

Adventures  of  two  boys  and  an  old  woodsman  with  a  pack  train  in 
Yellowstone  park.     Follows  Jack  among  the  Indians. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Grinnell,  G.  B.     When  buffalo  ran.  Yale  Univ.       2.00 

Author  is  the  greatest  living  authority  on  the  North  American  Indian. 

— Brooklyn 
Fiction         (7-8) 

*Hale,   E.  E.     Man  without  a  country.      (Flag  ed.)  Little        .60 

No  child  can  read  the  story  without  feeling,  as  he  has  never  done  be- 
fore, the  meaning  of  the  words,   "My  country." 
Fiction          (6-8) 

Hale,  L.  P.     Peterkin  papers.  Houghton       2.50 

Twenty-two  absurdly  funny  stories  of  the  unsuccessful  efforts  of  the 
Peterkin  family  to  become  wise. — Hardy. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Hamlin,  M.  C.     Nan  at  Camp  Ohicopee;   or,  Nan's  summer  with 

the  boys.  LitUe      1.75 

The  story  of  a  young  girl  and  her  brothers  and  companions,  with  all 
the  delights  of  genuine  summer  camp. — ^Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Henry,  O.,   pseud.     Ranson  of  Red   Chief,   and  other  stories  for 

boys.  Doubleday      1.90 

Selected  by  Scout  Librarian  of  the  Boy  Scouts  of  America. 
Fiction         (7-8) 


48  FICTION 

Heyliger,  William.    High  Benton.  Appleton      .75 

A  real  boy's  story  of  the  everyday  life  of  an  everyday  high  school  boy. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Holland,  R.  S.    Blackbeard's  island.  Lippincott       1.50 

Two  Southern  boys  and  one  Northern  one  search  for  hidden  treasure 
and  find  exciting  adventure. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Holland,  R.  S.    Boy  Scouts  of  Birchbark  island.  Lippincott       1.50 

The  adventures  are  of  the  wholesome  healthy  sort  such  as  any  party 
of  boys  might  encounter  in  a  simimer  out  of  doors. — Wilson. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Howells,  W.  D.    Christmas  every  day,  and  other  stories.     Harper       1.60 
Much  of  the  humor  with  which  readers  of  Howells'  novels  are  familiar 
appears  here  in  a  form  to  be  appreciated  by  children. 

— Prentice   and  Power. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Hoyt,  D.  L.     Barbara's  heritage.  Wilde       2.00 

Story,  with  art  and  travel  value,  of  the  experiences  of  a  party  of  young 
people  in  Italy. 
Fiction         (5-7) 

Hughes,  Thomas.    Tom  Brown's  school  days;  ed.  by  H.  C.  Bradby 

Ginn         .96 
An  excellent  library  edition. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Hughes,  Thomas.     Tom  Brown's  school  days.     (Riverside  litera- 
ture ser.)  Houghton         .80 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Hunt,  C.  W.    Little  house  in  the  woods.  Houghton      1.75 

A  delightful  story  for  a  difficult  age. 
Fiction  (4-5) 

Ingersoll,  Ernest.    Ice  queen.  Harper         .90 

A  story  of  endurance,  bravery  and  resource  of  three  boys  and  a  girl 
in  the  ice  fields  of  Lake  Erie. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

*Jackson,   H.   H.     Nelly's  silver  mine:    a  story  of  Colorado  life. 

Little       1.75 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Jacobs,  C.  E.    Texas  blue  bonnet.  Page       1.75 

Pleasant  story  of  an  impetuous,  motherless  Texas  girl  of  15  who  goes  to 
New  England  to  attend  school. — A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Janvier,  T.  A.    Aztec  treasure  house.  Harper       1.90 

A  search  for  hidden  treasure  in  the  Mexican  mountains. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Jenkins,  Marshall.    Norfolk  Boy  Scouts.  Appleton      1.75 

Very  interesting  story  of  the  wholesomely  thrilling  times  boys  have 
who  take  scouting  seriously. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Jewett,  S.  O.    Betty  Leicester.  Houghton       1.35 

This    story    will   bring    girls    into    the    atmosphere    of    New    England 
village  life. 
Fiction         (5-8) 

Jewett,  S.  O.    Betty  Leicester's  Christmas.  Houghton       1.35 

Sequel   to    "Betty    Leicester."      Betty    spends    Christmas    at    Danesly 
Castle,  England. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Johnson,  Mrs.  Clarke.     Earning  her  way  to  college.  Penn       1.75 

Story  of  an  ambitious  girl  who  works  to  go  to  college. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

King,  Charles.    Cadet  days.  Harper      1.60 

A  story  of  life  at  West  Point. 
Fiction         (7-8) 


FICTION  49 

Kipling,    Rudyard.     Captains   courageous.  Doubleday       2.00 

A  picture  of  life  aboard  a  Newfoundland  fishing  smack  and  how  it 
made  a  man  of  a  spoiled  son  of  the  rich. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

♦Kipling,  Rudyard.    Just  so  stories.  Doubleday       2.00 

The  stories  answer  to  the  extent  of  the  author's  whimsical  imagination, 
such  questions  as  How  the  camel  got  his  hump.  How  the  elephant  got  his 
trunk,  etc. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Kipling,  Rudyard.    Kim.  Doubleday       2.00 

A  tale  of  India :  one  of  Kipling's  most  famous  books. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Knipe,  Mrs.  E.  B.,  and  A.  A.    Girls  of  '64.  Macmillan       1.80 

A  story  of  life  in  the  South  during  the  Civil  war. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Knipe,  Mrs.  E.  B.,  and  A.  A.    Maid  of  old  Manhattan.     Macmillan       1.80 

A  pleasing  story  of  old  New  Amsterdam. 
Fiction          (7-8) 

Knipe,  Mrs.  E.  B.,  and  A.  A.    Vive  la  France;  a  narrative  founded 

on  the  diary  of  Jeannette  de  Martigny.  Century       1.90; 

A  story  of  a  French  girl  during  the  World  war. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Kueljer,  J.  Van  A.     Young  lion  of  Flanders;   a  tale  of  the  terror 

of  war.  Stokes       2.0a 

A  sixteen-year-old  Boy  Scout  becomes  a  dispatch  rider  in  the  Belgian 
army. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Lamprey,  L.    In  the  days  of  the  guild.  Stokes       2.50- 

Twenty-two   stories   with  thirteen   Illustrations,    recreating   the   golden 
days  of  English  arts  and  crafts. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Lamprey,  L.     Masters  of  the  guild.  Stokes       2.50 

Stories  of  life  in  the  middle  ages,  of  the  guilds,  their   masters  and 
apprentices. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Langford,  George.    Pic.  the  weapon  maker.  Boni  &  Liveright       1.75 

Story  of  prehistoric  life  of  man  and  animals. 
Fiction  (6-8) 

LaRamee,  Louise  de.     (Ouida,  pseud.)     Bimbi  stories  for  children. 

Ginn        .64 

"These  beautiful  Bimbi  stories  are  children's  classics." 
Fiction          (4-5) 

♦LaRamee,  Louise  de.     (Ouida,  pseud.)    Dog  of  Flanders.     (Child- 
ren's Classics  ser.)  Lippincott         .75 

Very  attractive  edition.    Pathetic  story  of  a  little  Flemish  boy  and  his 
big  dog. 
Fiction          (4-5) 

LaRamee,  Louise  de.     (Ouida,  pseud.)     Dog  of  Flanders.  Page         .90 

Fiction         (4-5) 

LaSelle,  M.  A.     Short  stories  of  the  new  America.  Holt       1.35 

Stories  illustrating  the  "spirit  of  America"  as  developed  by  the  late 
war. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Lawson,  W.  P.     Log  of  a  timber  cruiser.  DufCield       2.25 

On  U.  S.  service  in  the  Black  Range  in  New  Mexico. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Lindsay,  Maud.    Mother  stories.  Bradley       1.50 

Stories  embodying  some  of  tlie  truths  of  Froebel's  mother  play. 
372.2  (2-3) 


50  FICTION 

London,  Jack.    Brown  Wolf,  and  other  Jack  London  stories. 

Macmillan 
Selected  for  boys  by  the  Chief  Boy  Scout  librarian. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

London,  Jack.     Cruise  of  the  Dazzler.     (St.  Nicholas  books.) 

Century 
A    story    for    boys,    wholesome,    well    written    and    full    of    exciting 
adventures. — ^Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Marryat,    Frederick.     Masterman  Ready.      (Everyman's   ed.) 

Dutton 
(Button's  Children's  classics.) 
Adventure  on  a  desert  island. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Martineau,   Harriet.     Peasant  and   the  prince.      (Popular  ed.) 

Dutton 
Story  of  France  before  the  Revolution. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Mathiews,  F.  K.,  ed.    Boy  Scout  book  of  stories;  published  for  the 
Boy  Scouts  of  America.  Appleton 

Short  stories  from  Tarkington,  Mark  T^'ain,  Stevenson,  O'Henry,  Conan 
Doyle,  Quiller-Couch  and  others. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Meigs,  Cornelia.     Master  Simon's  garden.  Macmillan 

A  charming  story  of  colonial  days. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Meigs,  Cornelia.     Pool  of  stars.  Macmillan 

An  unusual  book,  a  girls'  story  which  will  also  be  enjoyed  by  boys. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Miller,  L.  E.    Hidden  people.  Scribner 

A  naturalist  writes  this  tale  of  thrilling  adventures  of  two  American 
boys  in  quest  of  the  treasiu-e  of  the  Incas. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Moon,  G.  P.,  and  Carl.    L#ost  Indian  magic.  Stokes 

The  adventiures  of  the  lost  magic   as   told  by   the   camp  fire   of  the 
Navajos. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Moulton,  L.  C.    More  bed-time  stories.  Ldttle 

Somewhat  old-fashioned,  but  written  in  choice  English. 
372.2         (4-5) 

Moulton,  L.  C.    New  bed-time  stories.  Little 

Simple  home  stories  for  girls  and  boys. 
372.2         (5-6) 

Mulock,  D.  M.    John  Halifax,  gentleman.     (Luxembourg  illus.  ed.) 

Crowell 
A  famous  story  of  English  domestic  life.— Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Munroe,  Kirk.    At  war  with  Pontiac;  or,  The  totem  of  the  bear. 

Scribner 
Story  of  the  seige  of  Detroit  by  Pontiac  in  1763. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Munroe,  Kirk.    Flamingo  feather.  Harper 

Exciting   adventures   of   a   French   lad   among   the    Spanish    and    the 
Florida  Indians  300  years  ago. — ^Pittsbxirgh. 
Fiction         (5-6) 
Munroe,  Kirk.    Fur-Seal's  tooth.  Harper 

Story  of  Alaskan  adventures. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Munroe,  Kirk.     With  Crockett  and  Bowie;    or,  Fighting  for  the 
Lone -star  flag.  Scribner 

The  Texan  revolution  of  1835,  with  the  heroic  defense  of  the  Alamo. 
Fiction         (6-7) 


FICTION  51 

Murrili,  W.  A.    Billy,  the  boy  naturalist.    Murrill,  Broxwood  Park, 

N.   Y.  1.50 

The  author's  experiences  as  a  boy  in  the  fields  and  woods  of  Virginia. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Otis,  James,    pseud.    Mr.  Stubbs'  brother.  Harper        .90 

Sequel  to  "Toby  Tyler." 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Otis,  James,    pseud.    Silent  Pete.  Harper        .90 

The  story  of  two  stowaways  who  go  from  New  Orleans  to  New  York  in 
search  of  a  home. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

♦Otis,  James,    pseud.    Toby  Tyler.  Harper        .90 

Toby  Tyler,  ten  years  old,  runs  away  with  a  circus. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Page,  T.  N.    Two  little  Confederates.  Scribner       1.75 

Two  little  boys  on  a  Virginia  plantation  during  the  Civil  War. 
Fiction          (5-6) 
Paine,  A.  B.     Arkansas  bear.  Altemus       1.50 

The  adventures  in  song  and  story  of  Bosephus  and  the  old  black  bear. 

— Cleveland. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Peattie,  Mrs.  E.  W.     Sarah  Brewster's  relatives.  Houghton       1.65 

Good  story  of  girls  in  their  teens. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

*Perkins,  Mrs.  L.  F.    Dutch  twins,     (school  ed.)  Houghton         .88 

One  of  a  delightful  series  of  books  about  children  of  different  nations. 
Attractive  illustrations  by  the  author. 
Others  in  the  series  are : 
The  Belgian  twins.  *The   Japanese    twins. 

The  Cave  twins.  The    Spartan   twins. 

*The  Irish  twins.  The    Scotch   twins. 

The  French  twins.  The  Mexican  twins. 

The  Eskimo  twins.  The   Italian   twins. 

each        .88 
Fiction         (2-3) 
f Porter,  Jane.    Scottish  chiefs.     (Luxembourg  illus.  ed.)        Crowell       2.50 
The   thrilling   story   of   William   Wallace    and   his   fight   for   Scottish 
liberty. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Price,  L.  L.    Lads  and  lassies  of  other  days.  Silver        .80 

Stories  of  children  of  colonial  and  revolutionary  period. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Putnam,  E.  H.     Watty  &  Co.  Macmillan       1.40 

Adventures  of  three  boys  on  an  island,  camping,  cooking,  fishing,  sail- 
ing, etc.,  told  with  unusual  ability  and  cleverly  illustrated. 
Fiction          (6-8) 

Pyle,  Howard.    Jack  Ballister's  fortunes.  Century      2.00 

A  wholesome  pirate  story  for  boys. 
Fiction          (7-8) 

{Pyle,  Howard.    Men  of  iron.  Harper       2.00 

Boy   life   in  an  English  castle   in  the  later  days   of  chivalry.     Fine 
moral  tone  and  literary  quality. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Pyle,  Howard.    Otto  of  the  silver  hand.  Scribner       2.50 

Story  of  the  days  of  the  robber  barons  in  Germany.    Beautifully  Illus- 
trated by  the  author. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

i*yle,  Katherine.     Nancy  Rutledge.  Little      1.65 

A  simply  written,  pleasant  story  of  a  little  country  girl  who  moves 
to  the  city. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Rankin,  C.  W.    Dandelion  cottage.     (Dandelion  ser.)  Holt       1.50 

About  four  little  girls  who  are  real  housekeepers  In  a  real  little  house. 

^Cleveland. 
Fiction         (5-7) 


52  FICTION 

Richards,  L.  E.     Quicksilver  Sue.  Century 

The  story  of  an  impetuous  little  girl. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Richards,  L.  E.    Captain  January.  Page 

Story  of  life  on  a  "rockbound  coast"  of  New  England. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Riis,  J.  A.     Children  of  the  tenements,  Macmillan 

True  stories  of  life  on  the  Bast  Side  in  New  York. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sabin,  E.  L.     General  Crook  and  the  flghting-  Apaches.  Lippincott 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sabin,  E.  L.    T  ost  with  Lieutenant  Pike.  Lippincott 

Story  of  Zebulon  Pike's  exploration  of  Colorado  one  hundred  years 
ago. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sabin,  E.  L.     Opening-  the  iron  trail.  Crowell 

"Time   and    place :     1867-1869,    upon    the    great   plains,    through    the 
deserts   and   over   the   mountains,    during   the    famous   railroad-building 
race  to  cover  the  continent." 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Sab  in,  E.  L.    Opening  the  west  with  Lewis  and  Clark.    Lippincott 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sabin,  E.  L.    Pluck  on  the  long  trail.  Crowell 

Boy  Scouts  in  the  Rockies.     A  stirring  narrative  of  packing,  trailing 
and  camping. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

St.  Nicholas  Christmas  book.  •  Century 

Fiction         (3-4) 

Schultz,  J.  W.    In  the  great  Apache  forest.  Houghton 

An  Indian  ,  a  Boy  Scout  and  a  forest  service  story. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Schultz,  J.  W.    Lone  Bull's  mistake,  Houghton 

A  well  worked  out  tale,  consistent  with  Indian  traditions. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Schultz,  J.  W.    Running  Eagle,  the  warrior  girl,  Houghton 

Story  of  an  Indian  girl  who  becomes  the  leader  of  her  tribe. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Scott,  Mrs.  E.  C.    Elizabeth  Bess.  Macmillan 

A  story  for  girls  of  New  England  life. 
Fiction         (4-7) 

Scott,  Mrs.  E.  C.    Loyalty  of  Elizabeth  Bess.  Macmillan 

Sequel  to  "Elizabeth  Bess." 
Fiction         (4-7) 

Scott,  Sir  Walter.    Ivanhoe.     (Riverside  literature  ser.)  Houghton 

Fiction         (7-8) 
Scott,  Sir  Walter.     Ivanhoe;   ed.  for  children  by  H.  P.  Williams. 

Appleton 
Very  good  edition. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Soott,  Sir  Walter.    Ivanhoe;  illus.  by  Milo  Winter.  Rand 

An    acceptable    library    edition    with    serviceable    cover,    good    large 
print,  and  pictures. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Scott,  Sir  Wallter.    Kenilworth,  Amer.  Bk. 

Tale  of  the  days  of  Good  Queen  Bess. — Pittsburgh, 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Scott,  Sir  Walter.     Quentin  Durward;    ed.  for  children  by  H.  P. 
Williams.  Appleton 

Fiction         (7-8) 


FICTION  53 

Scott,  Sir  Walter.    Talisman;  ed.  for  children  by  H.  P.  Williams. 

Appleton       1.75 
When  Richard  Coeur-de-Lion  went  to  the  Crusades. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sea  well,  M.  E.     Little  Jarvis.  Appleton      1.50 

Fight  of  the  Constellation  and  LaVengeance,  1810. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Seawell,  M.  E.    Virginia  cavalier.  Harper       1.75 

Story  of  Washington's  part  in  the  Revolutionary  war. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Seton,  E.  T.    Rolf  in  the  woods.  Doubleday      2.00 

Grosset       1.00 

A  wholesome  story  of  the  thrilling  forest  life  of  three  brave  comrades. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sidney,  Margaret,  pseud.     Five  little  Peppers  and  how  they  grew. 

Lothrop       1.75 
Popular  ed.         .75 
A  happy  story  of  a  family  poor  in  worldly  goods,  but  rich  in  lively 
boys  and  girls. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Singmaster,  Elsie.    John  Baring's  house.  Houghton       1.50 

Will  please  girls  who  like  mystery  stories. — Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Snedeker,  C.  D.    Spartan.  Doubleday       1.75 

Formerly  published  under  the  title,  "The  coward  of  Thermopylae." 
Fiction          (8) 

Snell,  R.  J.     Soolook,  wild  boy.  Little       1.75 

An  Eskimo  boy  makes  friends  with  some  American  boys  in  Alaska. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Spyri,  Johanna.    (Heidi;  tr.  by  H.  B.  Dole.  Ginn         .68 

Child  life   on  the  mountains   of   Switzerland  and  in   a   German   city. 
Strong  in  atmosphere. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

6pyri,   Johanna.     Mazli;    illus.   by   Maria   L.   Kirk.      (Stories   all 

children  love  ser.)  Lippincott       1.50 

Fiction         (4-6) 

Bpyri,  Johanna.    Little  curly  head;  tr.  by  H.  B.  Dole.  Crowell         .90 

A  story  of  a  pet  lamb  owned  by  two  Swiss  children. 
Fiction          (4-6) 

Stein,  Evaleen.     Little  shepherd  of  Provence.  Page       1.50 

Pretty  story  of  a  lame  Provencal  shepherd  boy  of  600  years  ago. 

—A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Stevenson,  R.  L.    Kidnapped.  (Scribner's  ser.  for  young  people.) 

Scribner       1.00 
The   exciting   adventures   of   the   Scotch    lad,   David   Balfour,    In    the 
year  1751. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

!*Stevenson,   R.   L.     Treasure  Island.     (Scribner's  ser.  for  young 

people.)  Scribner      1.00 

"It's  all  about  a  map  and  a  treasure,  and  a  mutiny  and  a  derelict 
ship,  and  a  current,  and  a  fine  old  Squire  Trelawney,  and  a  doctor,  and 
another  doctor,  and  a  seacook  with  one  leg,  and  a  sea  song  with  the 
chorus,  'Yo-ho-ho,  and  a  bottle  of  nun!" — Letters  of  Stevenson. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Stevenson,  R.  L.    Treasure  Island.    (Canterbury  classics.)        Rand        .75 

Fiction         (6-8) 
Stoddard,  W.  O.     Dab  Kinzer.  Scribner      1.50 

Fiction         (5-6) 


54  FICTION 

Stoddard,  W.  O.    Little  Smoke:  a  tale  of  the  Sioux.  Appleton 

A  tale  of  Glister's  last  flght. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Stoddard,  W.  O.    Talking  leaves.  Harper 

Fiction         (5-6) 

Stuart,  R.  M.    Story  of  Babette,  a  little  Creole  girl.  iBarper 

Babette  is  a  little  Creole  girl  stolen  by  the  gypsies. — Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Swift,  Jonathan.     Gulliver's  travels.   (Pocket  classics.)  Macmillan 
Circumstances,  incident  and  humor  which  the  child  understands  and 
enjoys  In  his  own  peculiar  way. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

Swift,  Jonathan.    Gulliver's  travels  into  several  remote  regions  of 
the  world.     (Home  and  school  classics.)  Heath 

Fiction         (6-8) 

Taggart,  M.  A.    Little  grey  house.  Doubleday 

Home  story  of  three  girls. 
Fiction         (5-6) 

Tarkington,  Booth.    Penrod.  Grosset 

Fiction         (6-8) 

Tarkington,  Booth.    Seventeen.  Grosset 

Revealing  stories  to  all  who  know  much  or  little  about  boys. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Theiss,  L.  E.     Champion  of  the  foothills.  Doubleday 

Adventures  of  bear  hunting,  fishing  and  scientific  farming.    Better  than 
the  other  farming  stories. — ^Bkl. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Thompson,  D.  P.    Green  Mountain  boys.     (Home  library.)       Burt 
An  old-time  romance  of  the  settlement  of  Vermont  and  the  stirring 
times  of  the  Revolution. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Tomiinson,  E.  T.     Boy  officers  of  1812.     (War  of  1812f  ser.) 

Lothrop 
Experiences  of  four  boys  on  and  about  Lake  Erie. — ^Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Tomiinson,  E.  T.     Boy  soldiers  of  1812.     (War  of  1812  ser.) 

Lothrop 
Tom  Garnet's  experiences  with  the  "press  gang." — ^Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Tomiinson,  E.  T.    Scouting  with  General  Funston.  Doubleday 

Two  Texas  boys  get  mixed  up  in  the  border  troubles. — N.  J. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Tomiinson,   E.  T.     Scouting  with  Kit  Carson.  Doubleday 

Fiction         (6-8) 
Tomiinson,  E.  T.     Search  for  Andrew  Field.   (War  of  1812  ser.) 

Lothrop 
Fairly  accurate  historically  and  very  readable. — ^Wisconsin. 
Fiction         (6-8) 
Tomiinson,  E.  T.     Three  colonial  boys.     (War  of  the  Revolution 
ser.)  Wilde 

Other  volumes  in  this  series  are  "Three  young  continentals,"  "Washing- 
ton's young  aides,"  and  "Two  young  patriots." 
Fiction         (6-8) 
True,  J.  P.    Iron  star,     (school  ed.)  Little 

The  story  of  a  meteorite  which  fell  to  earth  in  the  time  of  the  cave 
men  with  its  history  down  to  the  times  of  Miles  Standish. 
Fiction         (5-6) 
Twain,   Mark,  pseud.     Adventures   of  Huckleberry  Finn.    (Trade 
ed.)  Harper 

*  (Harper's  modern  classics,  school  ed.) 
Fiction         (7-8) 


FICTION  55 

Twain,  Mark,  pseud.     Adventures  of  Tom  Sawyer.     (Trade  ed.) 

Harper       2.25 
♦(Harper's  modern  classics,  school  ed.)       1,00 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Twain,    Mark,    pseud.      Personal    recollections    of    Joan    of    Arc. 

Harper      Z.25 
A  story  with  the  value  of  history. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Twain,  Mark,  pseud.     Prince  and  the  pauper.  Harper      2.25 

♦(Harper's  modern  classics,  school  ed.)       1.00 
The  Little  Edward  YI  of  England  changes  clothing  and  place  with  little 
Tom  Canty,  the  beggar-lad 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Vaile,  C.  M.     Orcutt  girls.  Wilde       1.75 

New  England  school  life. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Vaile,  C.  M.    Sue  Orcutt.  Wilde       1.75 

A  sequel  to  Orcutt  girls. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Van   Dyke,   Henry.     Story  of  the  other  wise  man.   (Popular  ed.) 

Harper        .75 
A  fourth  wise  man  who  set  out  to  seek  the  manger  cradle  at  Bethlehem. 
Fiction  (6-8) 

Verne,  Jules.     Twenty  thousand  leagues  under  the  sea.       Button       2.00 

Grosset       1.00 
On  this  journey  with  Captain  Nemo  a  boy  can  absorb  much  scientific 
information. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Wallace,  Dillon.     Grit-a-plenty.  Revell       1.75 

Spirited  story  written  by  a  man  who  has  lived  adventures. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Wallace,  Dillon.    Troop  One  of  the  Labrador.  Revell       1.75 

A  Boy  Scout  story  with  thrilling  adventures  in  the  far  north. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Wallace,   Dillon.     Ungava  Bob.      (Everyboy's   library.)        Grosset       1.00 

Fiction         (7-8) 
*Wal lace.  Lew.    Ben- Hur;  a  tale  of  Christ.  Grosset       1.00 

"The  whole  world  has  placed  Ben-Hur  on  a  height  of  preeminence  which 

no  other  novel  of  its  time  has  reached." 

Fiction  (7-8) 

Webster,  Jean.    Just  Patty.  Grosset       1.00 

Happy,  wholesome  story. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Weir,  Mrs.  F.  R.     Merry  Andrew.  Small       1.75 

A  breezy,  wholesome,  out-of-doors  story  for  girls. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (7-8) 
White,  E.  O.     Blue  aunt.  Houghton       1,65 

The  story  of  the  visit  of  a  charming  aunt. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

White,  E.  O.     Borrowed  sister.  Houghton       1.65 

What  an  only  child  did  during  one  delightful  year,  when  a  little  girl 
friend  was  left  in  her  mother's  charge. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (4-5) 

White,  S.  E.    Magic  forest.  Macmillan       1.25 

A  little  boy  among  the  Indians  in  Canada. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

White,  S.  E.    Simba.  Doubleday       2.00 

An  absorbing  tale  of  Simba,  the  gun  bearer,  and  the  hunting  of  lion 
Fiction         (7-8) 


56  DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL 

Whitney,   Mrs.  A.  D.  T.     Summer  in  Leslie  Goldthwaite's  life. 

Houghton 
A  good  story  for  girls. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

*    *Wlggin,  K.  D.    Bird's  Christmas  Carol  (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton 
A   pathetic   story   of  a   little   invalid  girl,   Carol   Bird,    who   made   a 
Merry  Christmas  for  the  "Ruggleses  in  the  rear." 
Fiction         (5-8) 

Wiggin,  K.  D.    Polly  Oliver's  problem.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton 
The  problem  is  how  to  earn  a  living  for  herself,  and  she  solves  it  in  a 

most  delightful  way. — ^Pittsburgh. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

*Wiggin,  K.  D.    Rebecca  of  Sunnybrook  Farm.  Grosset 

Rebecca  is  one  of  the  quaintest  and  most  delightful  children  ever  en- 
countered in  a  book. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Wilkins,   Eva.     Weaver's  children.  Amer.  Bk. 

A  true  story  of  pioneering  times  in  New  England. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Wilson,  E.  N.     (Uncle  Nick,  pseud.)     White  Indian  boy;  rev.  and 
ed.  by  H.  N.  Driggs,     (Pioneer  life  ser.)  World  Bk. 

"Uncle  Nick"  tells  a  true  story  of  his  adventures  of  pioneering  days  in 
the    west,    among    the    Shoshone    Indians,    cattle    thieves,    trappers    and 
hunters  of  big  game. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Wyss,   J.   D.  von.     Swiss   family   Robinson.      (Home   and    school 

library.)  Ginn 

Fiction         (4-7) 
*Wyss,    J.    D.    von.      Swiss    family    Robinson;     illus.    by    Louis 

Rhead.  Harper 

An  excellent  edition  of  this  old  favorite. 

Fiction         (4-7) 

Zollinger,  Gulielma.     Maggie  McLanehan.  McClurg 

How  Irish  Maggie  won  a  home  for  herself  and  little  Nora. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

Zollinger,  Gulielma.    Widow  O'Callaghan's  boys.  McClurg 

The  story  of  the  poor  widow's  seven  sons  and  how  they  earn  a  liveli- 
hood.   Popular  story. — Cleveland. 
Fiction         (6-7) 

Zwilgmeyer,  Dikken.     What  happened  to  Inger  Johanne;  as  told 
by  herself.  Lothrop 

An  amusing  story  with  a  Norwegian  setting. 
Fiction         (6-8) 

DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL. 

Andrews,  Jane.    Each  and  all:  the  seven  little  sisters  prove  their 
sisterhood.  Ginn 

A  companion  to  "Seven  little  sisters"  and  more  about  them. — Oregon. 
910  (3-4) 

Andrews,  Jane.     Seven  little  sisters.  Ginn 

Seven  little  girls  who  lived  in  seven  parts  of  the  world.    A  remarkable 
geographical  book  for  little  children. 
910  (2-3) 

Ayrton,   Mrs.   M.  C.     Child  life   in  Japan;    ed.  by  W.  E.    Griffis. 

Heath 
Festivals,  games  and  sports  of  Japanese  children. 
915.2         (5-7) 


DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL  57 

Babson,  R.  W.     Central  American  Journey.  World  Bk.       1.40 

Two  children  in  Costa  Rica,  Nicaragua,  Honduras,  Gautemala  and  the 
Panama  canal.     Maps  and  photographs  add  to  Its  value. 
917.2  (5-7) 

Bacon,  A.  M.    Japanese  girls  and  women.     (Riverside  library  for 

young  people.)  Houghton       1.10 

Interesting  Information  on  life  and  customs  In  Japan. 
915.2  (7-8) 

nBorup,  George.     Tenderfoot  with  Peary.     (Boy's  ed.)  Stokes       1.75 

A  Yale  athlete's  account  of  his  experience  while  in  the  Arctic  regions 
with  Peary. 
919.8          (7-8) 

Carpenter,  F.  G.     Around  the  world  with  the  children.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 
Visits  to  the  homes  of  each  of  the  great  races.     Good  print  and  many 
pictures  make  this  introduction  to  geography  pleasant  reading. 
910  (3-4) 

Carpenter,  F.  G.    Geographical  readers.      Amer  Bk.  ea.  .96 

Africa  916 

Asia  915 

Australia,  our  colonies  and  other  islands  of  the  sea.  910 

Europe.  914 

North  America.  917 

South  America.  918 

Plain   simple  description   of  the  physical  features,  natural  resources, 
life  and  industries  of  the  countries  visited. 
(5-7) 

Carroll,  S.  W.,  and  C.  F.    Around  the  world,  geographical  readers. 

Eskimos,  North  American  Indians.  Vol.  1         .80 

Russia,  India,  Egypt,  Scotland.  Vol.  2        .88 

Alaska,  Mexico,  Norway,  Sweden,  Cuba.  Vol.  3         .92 

United  States  and  its  dependencies.  Vol.  4         .96 

British  empire  and  Italy.  Vol.  5       1.00 

Large,  clear  type,  many  and  good  pictures. 
910  (1-5) 

Chamberlain,    J.    F.     How    we    travel.      (Home    and    world    ser.) 

Macmillan         .88 

Describes  the  different  methods  of  travel  in  all  parts  of  the   world. 

— Wisconsin. 
380  (4-6) 

Chance,  L.  M.     Little  folks  of  many  lands.  Ginn         .64 

Stories  describing  the  children  of  different  races,  the  Indian,  Eskimo. 
Dutch,  Filipino,  etc.  and  giving  legends  and  folklore.  For  little  children. 

— ^A.  L.  A. 
910  (2-4) 

Children  of  other  lands  books.  Lothrop.    ea.       1.25 

Each  volume  contains  the  story  of  some  one  who  has  lived  the  life 
described  and  later  come  to  America  for  fuller  opportimity.  Illustrated 
by  photographs.     The  following  volumes  are  included  in  the  series: 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  China.    Yan  Phou  Lee. 

When  I  was  a  girl  in  Italy.     Marietta  Ambrosi. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Japan.     Sakae  Shioya. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Greece.     George  Demetrios. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Palestine.     Mousa  J.  Kaleel. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Belgium.     Robert  Jonckheere. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Russia.     Vladimir  De  Bogory. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Roumania.    Dr.  J.  S.  Van  Teslaar. 

When  I  was  a  girl  in  Holland.     Cornelia  de  Groot. 

When  I  was  a  girl  in  Mexico.     Mercedes  Godoy. 

When  I  was  a  girl  in  Iceland.     Holmfridur  Arnadottir. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Scotland.     G.  M.  Hunter. 

When  I  was  a  boy  in  Persia.     Y.  B.  Mirza. 
910         (5-8) 


58  DESCRIPTION  AND   TRAVEL 

Children  of  the  world  series.  Educ.  Pub.     ea.         .60 

Story  of  little  Jan,  the  Dutch  boy.     H.  L.  Campbell. 
Story  of  little  Konrad,  the  Swiss  boy.     H.  U  Campbell. 
♦Story  of  little  Metzu,  the  Japanese  boy.     H.  L.  Campbell. 

Attractive  little  books,  with  pleasing  descriptions  of  life  and  custom 
in  far  countries. 
910  (4-5) 

Franck,  H.  A.    Working  my  way  around  the  world;   rewritten  by 

Lena  M.  Franck.  Century       2.00 

An  abridgment  for  young  people  of  "A  vagabond  journey  around  the 
Vforld."  Full  of  delightful  and  intimate  pictures  of  strange  countries. 
910         (7-8) 

Horton,  Edith.    Frozen  north:  an  account  of  Arctic  exploration  for 

use  in  schools.  Heath         .96 

Tells  of  Franklin,   Kane,   Nordenskjold,   Greeley,   Nansen,    Peary    and 
Andree. — Wisconsin. 
919.8  (4-6) 

Krout,   M.   H.     Alice's  visit  to  the   Hawaiian   islands.      (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

A  record  of  the  travels  of  a  little  American  girl. 
919.69  (5-7) 

Lane,  M.  A.,  ed.     Strange  lands  near  home.     (Youth's  Companion 

ser.)  ^Ginn         .60 

Mexico  and  South  America. 
918  (6-8) 

Lane,  M.  A.     Towards  the  rising  sun.   (Youth's  Companion  ser.) 

Ginn        .60 
Life  in  India,  China,  Japan,  Korea  and  East  Indies. — ^Wisconsin. 
915  (5-8) 

Lane,  M.  A.    Wide  world.     (Youth's  Companion  ser.)  Ginn        .60 

Child  life  in  many  lands 
910  (5-6) 

Little  cousin  series.    54  vol.  Page.    ea.       1.00 

The  daily  home  life  of  each  country  is  described,  mode  of  dress,  work 
and  play,  customs  of  the  people  and  some  adventures.  Attractive  bind- 
ing. A  volume  each  is  devoted  to  our  little  cousins  of  Africa,  Alaska, 
Arabia,  Argentine,  Armenia,  Australia,  Belgiiun,  Bohemia,  Brazil,  Bul- 
garia, Canada,  China,  Cuba,  Czecho-Slovakia,  Denmark,  Holland,  Egypt, 
Eskimo,  Finland,  France,  Germany,  Greece,  Hawaii,  India,  Ireland,  Italy, 
Japan,  Jerusalem,  Korea,  Malay,  Mexico,  Norway,  Panama,  Persia, 
Philippines,  Poland,  Porto  Rico.  Portugal,  Quebec,  Roumania,  Russia, 
Scotland,  Servia,  Siam,  Siberia.  Spain,  Sweden,  Switzerland  and  Turkey. 
910  (3-5) 

Little  cousins  of  long  ago  series.     11  vol.  Page.     ea.       1.00 

These  stories  of  our  little  cousins  of  ancient  times  follow  the  same 
plan  as  the  Little  cousin  series. 
Our  little  Athenian  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Celtic  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Crusader  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Carthaginian  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Frankish  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Macedonian  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Norman  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Roman  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Saxon  cousin  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Spartan  coutein  of  long  ago. 
Our  little  Viking  cousin  of  long  ago. 
910         (3-5) 


DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL  59 

Little  journey  series.    19  vol.  Flanagan,    ea.        .75 

Valuable  for  Interesting  children  in  the  geography  of  the  various 
countries  described.  Includes  several  volumes  on  picturesque  parts  of  our 
own  country.     The  countries  are : 

Hawaii  and  the  Phillippines.  Cuba    and    Porto    Rico. 

Mexico  and  Central  America.  Alaska  and  Canada. 

Holland,  Belgium  and  Denmark.      England  and.  Wales. 
Scotland  and  Ireland.  France  and  Switzerland. 

Italy,  Spain  a,nd  Portugal.  Norway  and  Sweden. 

Our  western  Wonderland.  The  great  Southwest. 

South  Africa  and  up  the  east  coast.  China  and  Japan. 
Some  Strange  places  and  peoples  in  our  Southwestern  lands. 
910         (5-8) 

Little  people  everywhere  series,     (school  ed.)     14  vol.     Little,     ea.         .80 
Books  in  this  unusually  attractive  series  give  considerable  information, 
in  story  form,   al>out  countries  and  people.     The  following  titles  have 
been  issued: 

Josefa  in  Spain,  Hussan  in  Egypt. 

Betty  in  Canada.  Kathleen  in  Ireland. 

Boris  in  Russia.  Manuel  in  Mexico. 

Collette  in  France,  Marta  in  Holland. 

Donald  in  Scotland.  Rafael  in  Italy. 

Fritz  in  Germany.  Ume   San   in  Japan. 

Gerda  in  Sweden.  Chandra  in  India. 

910         (4-6) 

Little  schoolmate  series.  Dutton.    ea.      2.0*0 

Bates,  K.  L.     In  sunny  S^ain  with  Pilarica  and  Rafael. 
Cammaerts,  E.  and  T.    Boy  of  Bruges.     (Belgium.) 
Colum,  P.    Boy  in  Eirinn.     (Ireland.) 
Dragoumis,  J.  D.     Under  Greek  skies. 
Gaines,  R.  L.     Treasure  Flower,  a  child  of  Japan. 
Gaines,  R.  L.,  and  Read,  G.  W.     Village  shield.     (Mexico.) 
Green,  E.  M.  Laird  of  Glentyre.     (Scotland.) 
Meiklejohn,  N.  A.     Cart  of  many  colors.       (Italy.) 
Mulcts,  L.  E.     Elsbeth. 
Portor,  L.  S.  Genevieve. 
910         (4-8) 

Lummis,  C.  F.  Some  strange  corners  of  our  own  country.  Century      2.00 
"In  the  southwestern  part  of  the  United  States." 
917.8  (7-8) 

MacClintock,  Samuel.     Philippines;    a  geographical  reader. 

Amer.  Bk.        .60 
Descriptions  of  our  possessions  in  the  Pacific. — ^Wisconsin. 
919.14         (4-7) 

Marwick,  W.  F.,  and  Smith,  W.  A.     South  American  republics. 

(World  and  its  people.)  Silver      1.08 

A  reliable  geopraphical  reader. — Oregon. 
918         (6-8) 

Mirick,  G.  A.    Home  life  around  the  world,     (school  ed.)  Houghton        .88 
Profusely    illustrated   with    pictures,    most    of   which    were    taken    by 
Burton  Holmes. 
910         (3-5) 

Mitchell,  A.  F.    Paz  and  Pablo.  World  Bk.        .80 

A  story  of  two  little  Filipinos. 
Fiction         (2-3) 


60  DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL 

Morris,  Charles.    Home  life  in  all  lands.  3  vol.     (school  ed.)     ea. 

Lippincott        .80 
V.  1 — ^How  the  world  lives.    V.  2 — Manners  and  customs  of  uncivilized 
peoples.    V.  3 — Animal  friends  and  helpers. 
910  (6-7) 

Mulets,  L.  E.     (Mary  MuUer,  pseud.)     Little  people  of  the  snow. 

Flanagan         .70 
A  story  of  Eskimo  children. 
919.8  (2-4) 

Olmstead,  E.  G.,  and  Grant,  E.  B.    Ned  and  Nan  in  Holland.    Row        .60 
A  usable  first  reader  with  pictures  in  two  colors. — ^A.  L.  A. 
Fiction         (1-2) 

Par  km  an,  Francis.     Oregon  trail:   sketches  of  prairie  and  Rocky 

mountain  life;    illus.  by  Remington.  Little      3.00 

Popular  ed.       Z.OO 
Mr.  Remington's  Indian  scouts  and  bucking  bronchos  have  led  many  a 
boy  to  this  delightful  author. 
917.8  (7-8) 

Peeps  at  many  lands.    15  vol.  (New  American  ed.)    Macmillan.  ea.       1.50 
Valuable    and    attractive    books    with    beautiful    colored    illustrations. 

Each    volxime    contains    a    description    of    two    countries.      The    series 

includes : 

London  and  Paris.  Russia  and   Poland. 

England  and  Wales.  Norway  and  Denmark. 

Scotland  and  Ireland.  Sweden  and  Finland. 

Holland  and  Belgium.  Italy  and  Greece. 

France  and  Alsace-Lorraine.    Egypt  and   the  Holy  Land. 

Canada  and  Newfoundland.        Australia   and    New   Zealand. 

Spain  and  Portugal.  South  America  and  Panama. 

China  and  Japan. 

910         (6-8) 
Perdue,  H.  A.     Child  life  in  other  lands.  Rand         .85 

910         (3-4) 
♦Perkins,  L.  F.    Dutch  twins  primer,     (school  ed.)  Houghton         .68 

The  Twin  series  by  Mrs.  Perkins   (see  under  Fiction)   is  valuable  for 

supplementing  geography  from  the  third  to  the  fifth  grades,  and  is  most 

interesting  for  small  children. 

372.4  (2-3) 

Plummer,  M.  W.    Roy  and  Ray  in  Mexico.  Holt      1.30 

A  record  of  a  joiimey  recently  taken  to  eight  Mexican  cities.     Will 

be   helpful   to    teachers.      Attractive    as    to   print,    paper    and    binding. 

—A.  L.  A.  ; 

917.7  (6-7) 

Rihbany,  A.  M.    Hidden  treasure  of  Rasmola.  Houghton       1.75 

A  true  story  of  an  exciting  adventure  in  the  youth  of  the  author  in  his 

native  country  of  Syria. 

Fiction         (8) 

Rinehart,  M.  R.    Tenting  tonight.  Houghton       2.00 

A  camping  expedition  through  Glacier  park  and  the  Cascade  mountains. 

917.8  (7-8) 

St.    Nicholas    magazine.      Geographical    stories,    retold    from    St. 

Nicholas.  Century,     ea.       1.25 

Island  stories.  Sea  Stories. 

Southern  stories.  Stories  of  the  Great  Lakes. 

Stories  of  strange  sights.  Western  frontier  stories. 

Although  mainly  fiction,  these  stories  have  geographical  value  and  are 
interesting  and  well  told.  The  "Stories  of  strange  sights"  include 
accounts  of  volcanoes,  waterspouts,  mirage,  cyclones,  etc.  "Southern 
stories"  are  sketches  of  southern  life  by  Joel  Chandler  Harris  and  other 
well  known  writers. 
FicUon         (4-7) 

Scandlin,  Christiana.    Hans,  the  Eskimo:  a  story  of  Arctic  adven- 
ture. Silver        .76 
Fiction         (3-4) 


DESCRIPTION  AND  TRAVEL.  Ql 

Schwartz,  J.  S.     Five  little  strangers  and  how  they  came  to  live 

in  America.     (Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.  Bk.        .60 

On  Indian  life;  life  among  the  Pilgrims;  the  negro  child  brought 
from  Africa;  the  Chinese  boy  In  San  Francisco;  and  the  Filipino  child. 
910         (3-4) 

♦Shaw,    Edward.     Big   people   and   little  people   of   other  lands. 

Amer.  Bk.         .52 

China,  Japan,  Arabia,  Korea,  India.  Lapland,  Greenland,  Russia, 
Switzerland,  Patagonia,  Africa,  the  Phillippines  and  the  Amazon  valley. 
910  (3-4) 

Slocum,  Josiah.    Around  the  world  in  the  sloop,  Spray.    (School 

reading.)  Scribner         .88 

A  geographical  reader  describing  a  voyage  alone  around  the  world. 
910         (7-8) 

Smith,  M.  R.  E.    Eskimo  stories.  Rand        .75 

A  reader  for  young  children.  To  be  read  by  those  who  have  heard  the 
Peary   stories. — Oregon. 

919.8  (2-3) 

Starr,  Frederick,    Strange  peoples.  Heath        .92 

Strange  people  of  North  and  South  America,  Europe,  Asia,  Africa  and 
the  Philippines.  The  writer  is  one  of  authority  and  writes  In  a  pleasing 
manner. 

572.9  (5-8) 

Starr,  L.  B.    Mustafa,  the  Egyptian  boy;  a  tale  of  oriental  child 

life.  Flanagan        .70 

About  modern  Egyptian  life  and  the  customs  and  religion  of  the  people 
in  Cairo. — Oregon. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Stockton,  F.  R.    Buccaneers  and  pirates  on  our  coast.  Macmillan       2'.5,0 

True  stories  of  the  pirates  of  the  West  Indies. 
910.4  (7-8) 

Stuck,  Hudson.     Ten  thousand  miles  with  a  dog  sled.       Scribner      3.00 
Very  Interesting  accoimt  of  a  journey  in  Alaska. 
919.8  (7-8) 

Tomlinson,  E.  T.     Places  young  Americans  want  to  know. 

Appleton       2.00 
Description  of  places  that  should  be  well  known  by  every  American. 
917  (6-8) 

Wade,  M.  H.    Little  folks  of  North  America.  Wilde      1.50 

Little  people  of  Mexico,  Canada,  Alaska,  Labrador,   Greenland,  New- 
foundland, etc. 
917  (5-7) 

White,  S.  E.     Land  of  footprints.  Doubleday      2.00 

Adventiu*es  of  a  hunting  party  In  East  Africa. 

916  (7-8) 

Whittum,  L.  S.     Little  folks  of  far-away  lands.     Educ.  Pub.  .60 

910         (3-4) 

Winsiow,  I.  O.     Winslow's  geography  series.    5  vol.     Heath,     ea.         .96 
V.    1— Earth  and   its  people.     V.    2— The  United   States.     V.    3— Our 
American  neighbors.     V.   4 — Europe.     V.   5 — ^Distant  countries. 
910  (3-8) 

Yard,  R.  S.    Top  of  the  continent;  the  story  of  a  cheerful  journey 

through  our  national  parks.  Scribner       1.35 

917  (5-7) 

Young,  E.  R.    My  dogs  in  the  northland.  Revell      1.50 

Experiences  with  different  types  of  useful  dogs. 
636.7  (6-8) 


62  STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE 

STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE. 

Adams,  E.  C,  and  Foster,  W.  D.     Heroines  of  modem  progress. 

Macmillan       2.25 
Material  much  in  demand,  yet  hard  to  find.    Sketches  of  Elizabeth  Fry, 
Mary  Lyon,  Elizabeth   Cady   Stanton,  Harriet  Beecher  Stowe,   Florence 
Nightingale,   Clara   Barton,   Julia   Ward  Howe,   Frances   E.    Willard,  J. 
Kllen  Foster,  Jane  Addams. 
920.7         (6-8) 

Andrews,  Jane.     Ten  boys  who  lived  on  the  road  from  long  ago 

to  now.  Ginn        .64 

Partial   contents:     The   story   of   Darius,   of   Cleon,    of   Horatius,    of 
Ezekiel  Fuller,  of  Jonathan  Dawson,  of  Frank  Wilson. 
904  (5-6) 

Bachman,  F.  P.    Great  inventors  and  their  inventions.  Amer.  Bk.        .80 
Stories  of  inventors  and  the  development  of  twelve  great  Inventions. 
609          (7-8) 

Bailey,  0.  S.     Hero  stories.  Bradley       1.50 

Biography  that  is  especially  adapted  for  the  child's  reading. 
920  (5-7) 

Baldwin,   James.  American   book   of   golden   deeds.      (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

True  stories  of  heroic  deeds  done  on  American  soil  by  Americans. 
920         (5-7) 

Baldwin,  James.    Fifty  famous  people;  a  book  of  short  stories. 

Amer.   Bk.        .52 
Stories  of  Lincoln,  Edward  Everett,  Paul  Revere,  Benjamin  West,  King 
Alfred,  Cyrus  the  Great,  Coriolanus,  St.  Francis,  Robert  Bruce,  the  seven 
wise  men  of  Greece  and  many  other  famous  people. 
904  (3-4) 

^Baldwin,  James.    Four  great  Americans.  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

Washington,  Franklin,  Webster  and  Lincoln. 
923.2  (4-6) 

Beebe,  M.  B.    Four  American  naval  heroes.  Amer.  Bk.        .64 

Paul  Jones,  Perry,  Farragut  and  Dewey. 
923.5  (5-7) 

Blaisdell,  A.  F.,  and  Ball,  F.  K.    Pioneers  of  America.  Little      1.20 

Stories  mostly  of  fighting  the  Indians,  with  anecdotes  of  noted  frontiers- 
men.— Bkl. 
973.1         (4-5) 

*Bolton,  S.  K.     Lives  of  poor  boys  who  became  famous.     (New 

Edition)  Crowell       2.00 

923         (6-8) 

Brady,  C.  T.    Border  fights  and  fighters.  Doubleday      1.50 

Brilliant  exploits  of  John  Sevier,  Daniel  Boone,  Henry  Bouquet,  George 
Rogers  Clark,  Sam  Houston,  David  Crockett,  Andrew  Jackson  and  others. 
973.1         (7-8) 

Brooks,  E.  S.    Century  book  of  famous  Americans.  Century       2.00 

Visits  to  the  homes  of  famous  Americans. 
923         (7-8) 

Brooks,  E.  S.    Historic  girls.  Putnam      1.75 

The  stories  of  Zenobia,  Helena  of  Britain,  Clotilda,  Queen  Elizabeth, 
Christina  of  Sweden,  and  others. 
92'0.7  (6-8) 

Burton,  A.  H.    Four  American  patriots.  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

Henry,  Hamilton,  Jackson  and  Grant. 
923         (5-7) 

Cody,  Sherwin.    Four  American  poets.  Amer.  Bk.        .64 

Bryant,  Whittier,  Longfellow  and  Holmes. 
928         (6-7) 


STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE  63 

Cody,  Shepwin.    Four  famous  American  writers,  Amer.  Bk.        .64 

Irving,  Poe,  Lowell  and  Bayard  Taylor. 
928          (6-8) 

Coe,  F.  E.    Founders  of  our  country.  Amer.  Bk.        .64 

Good  stories  of  early  exploration  and  settlement.  Will  be  very  xiaeful. 
973.2         (6-8) 

*Coe,  F.  E.    Heroes  of  everyday  life.  Ginn        .72 

A  compilation  of  selections  from  modem  authors  showing  instances 
of  heroism  by  engineers,  miners,  telegraphers,  etc.  Excellent  material. 
926  (6-8) 

Coe,  F.  E.    Makers  of  the  nation.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Valuable  Information  In  attractive  form. 
973.2  (6-8) 

*Eggleston,     Edward.      Stories    of    great    Americans    for    little 

Americans.  Amer.  Bk.         .60 

Personal  anecdote  about  the  boyhood  of  Franklin,  Washington,  Boone, 
Longfellow,  Webster,  Greeley  and  others. 
923.2  (2-3) 

Ellis,  E.  S.    Lives  of  the  presidents.  Flanagan        .75 

Concrete  biographical  sketches. 
923.2          (5-7) 

Paris,  J.  T.     Makers  of  our  history.  Ginn       1.00 

Including  lives  of  Franklin,  Washington,  Robert  Morris,  Boone, 
Jefferson,  George  Rogers  Clerk,  Hamilton,  Fulton,  Whitney,  John  Quincy 
Adams,  Audubon,  Daniel  Webster,  Peter  Cooper,  Samuel  Morse,  Houston, 
Robert  E.  Lee,  Longfellow,  Lincoln,  McCormick,  Greeley,  Cyrus  W.  Field, 
Grant,  Parkman,  Mark  Twain,  John  Muir,  Lanier,  Edison,  Bell. 
923  (5-8) 

Faris,  J.  T.    Winning  their  way.  Stokes      1.5(J 

Forty-eight  inventors,   scientists,   explorers,   industrial   leaders,   states- 
men, authors,  etc. — Wisconsin. 
920  (7-8) 

Farmer,   L.   H.     Girl's  book  of  famous  queens.     (Young  people's 

ser.)  Crowell       1.50 

Ancient  and  modem,  from  Semiramis  to  Queen  Victoria. 
920.7          (7-8) 

Faulkner,  Georgene.     Red  Cross  stories  for  children.    Daughaday        .50 
Short  stories  of  heroes  and  heroines  of  mercy  down  to  the  present  day. 
361  (2-3) 

*Fraser,  C.  C.    Work-a-day  heroes.  Crowell       1.60 

Heroism  no  less  real  because  it  is  part  of  the  daily  work  of  the  miner, 
iron-worker,   steeple-jack,   painter,    window  washer,  policeman,   mounted 
police,  fireman,  diver,  hxmter,  animal  trainer,  air-man  and  others  of  the 
work-a-day  world. 
926  (6-8) 

Gilbert,  Henry.    Boy's  book  of  pirates.  Crowell      2.50 

A  history  of  pirates  and  piracy  from  the  time  of  Caesar  to  the  last 
well  known  pirate,  Benito   del    Soto,   in   the   early   nineteenth   century. 
Well  illustrated,  and  told  in  clear,  interesting  style. — ^A.  L.  A. 
923.41  (7-8) 

Gordy,  W.  F.    American  leaders  and  heroes.  Scribner      1.00 

Personal    element    predominates.       Events    grouped    around    famous 
leaders. — Wisconsin. 
923  (4-6) 

Haaren,  J.  H.   Famous  men  of  the  middle  ages.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Attila,  Clovis,  Mohammed,  Charlemagne,  Alfred  the  Great,  Marco  Polo 
and  others. 
920  (4-7) 

Haaren,  J.  H.,  and  Poland',  A.  B.    Famous  men  of  Greece. 

Amer.  Bk.        .72 
Heroes  of  myth  and  history.     Numerous  illustrations. 
920         (4-7) 


64  STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE 

Haaren,  J.  H.,  and  Poland,  A.  B.    Famous  men  of  modem  times. 

Amer.  Bk.        .72 
Twenty-three    famous    men.    Including,    Lorenzo,    Columbus,    Bayard, 
Cardinal  Wolsey,  Drake,  Raleigh,  Galileo,  Cromwell,  Isaac  Newton,  Peter 
the  Great,  Pitt,  Washington,  Napoleon,  Lincoln. 
920  (6-7) 

Hale,  E.  E.    Boys'  heroes.  Lothrop       1.25 

Heroes  of  war  and  adventure,  such  as  Hector,  Alexander,  Richard  the 
Lion  Hearted,  Bayard,  King  Arthur,  Robinson  Crusoe. 
920  (7-8) 

Hall,  Jennie.    Men  of  old  Greece,     (school  ed.)  Little        .85 

Very  readable  book  about  Leonidas,   Themistocles,   Phidias,    Socrates 
and  the  Parthenon. 
920         (5-6) 

Humphrey,  Mrs.  F.  A.    Favorite  authors  for  little  folks.  Lothrop      1.00 
Sketches,  with  portraits,  of  Longfellow,  Whittier,  Lucy  Larcom,  Aldrich, 
Trowbridge,    Stowe,    Holmes,    Alcott,    Hawthorne,    the    Carys,    Bryant, 
Margaret  Sidney. 
928  (2-4) 

Husband,  Joseph.  Americans  by  adoption.  Atlantic  Monthly  1.50 
American  boys  will  be  interested  in  these  boys  from  other  lands  who 
came  to  America  to  share  its  opportunities  and  became  such  men  as 
Stephen  Gerard,  John  Ericsson,  Louis  Agasslz,  Carl  Schurz,  Theodore 
Thomas,  Andrew  Carnegie,  James  J.  Hill,  Augustus  Saint-Gaudens  and 
Jacob  Riis. 
920  (7-8) 

lieSf  George.     Leading  American  inventors.  Holt       2.00 

Sketches  of  the  great  inventors  and  description  of  their   inventions. 
609  (7-8) 

Johnston,  C.  H.  L.    Famous  discoverers  and  explorers  of  America. 

Page       2.0« 
Sixteen   biographies,    beginning  with   Leif   Erickson   and   ending   with 
Robert  E.  Peary. — A.   L.  A. 
923.9  (6-8) 

Johnston,  C.  H.  L.    Famous  scouts.  Page       2.00 

Sketches  of  famous  frontiersmen,  trappers  and  scouts. 

923.8  (7-8) 

Keysor,  J.  E.    Sketches  of  American  writers.     2  vols.  Educ.  Publ. 

ea.         .75 
Vol.    1 — Irving,    Cooper,    Drake,    Halleck,    Bryant,    Hawthorne,    Long- 
fellow, Emerson,  Holland. 

Vol.  2 — Thoreau,  Willis,  Poe,  Taylor,  Lowell,  Whittier,  Holmes,  Alice 
and  Phoebe  Gary,  Louisa  May  Alcott. 
928         (5-8) 

Kingsley,  N.  F.    Pour  American  explorers. 

923.9  (4-6) 

Lanier,  H.  W.    Book  of  bravery. 

Carefully  compiled  to  show  emotion  underlying  action. 
920         (7-8) 

Lanier,  H.  W.     Second  book  of  bravery. 
Illustrating  the  different  types  of  courage. 
920         (7-8) 

Lanier,  H.  W.    Book  of  bravery.     Third  series. 
920  (7-8) 

Lansing,    M.   F.     Barbarian   and   noble.      (Mediaeval   builders    of 

the    modem    world.)  Ginn         .68 

Careful   historical    sketch    covering    the    period    between   Drusus    and 
Richard  Coeur-de-Lion. — ^A.  L.  A. 
940  (5-7) 

Lawler,  T.  B.    Story  of  Columbus  and  Magellan.  Ginn        .60 

Good  illustrations  and  print.  a 

973.1         (5-6)  ^ 


Amer.  Bk. 

.64 

Scribner 

2.50 

Scribner 

2.50 

Scribner 

2.50 

STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE  g5 

Mabie,  H.  W.,  ed.     Heroes  every  child  should  know.       Houghton         .92 
Perseus,  Daniel,  St.   George,   King  Arthur,   Siegfried,   The  Cld,   Robin 
Hood,  St.  Louis,  William  Tell,  Washington,  Lincoln,  Lee  and  others. 
920  (5-7) 

Mabie,    H.   W.,   and   Stephens,    Kate,   eds.     Heroines   every   child 

should  know.  Grosset      1.00 

Antigone,  Joan  of  Arc,  Lady  Jane  Grey,  Flora  McDonald,  Madame 
Roland,  Florence  Nightingale  and  others. 

920.7  (5-7) 

McFee,  Inez.     Stories  of  American  inventions.  Crowell       1.60 

Some   inventions  American  men  have  given   the  world,    including  the 
cotton-gin,  steamboat,   reaper,  telegraph,  sewing-machine,  electric  light, 
phonograph,  submarine,   "the  movies,"  aeroplane,  electric  furnace. 
609  (5-7) 

McSpadden,  J.  W.    Boys'  book  of  famous  soldiers.  Crowell      1.60 

Brief   biographies   of   Washington,    Grant,   Lee,    Napoleon,   Wellington, 
Gordon,  Roberts,  Kitchener,  Haig,  Joffre,  Foch  and  Pershing. 
920.5  (3-8) 

Marden,  O.  8.     Stories  from  life.     (Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .60 
Brief   biographical    sketches    and    incidents    from    the    lives    of    great 
men,  which  show  how  success  has  been  won. — Oregon. 
920  (5-8) 

Moffet,  Cleveland.    Careers  of  danger  and  daring.  Century      2.00 

A  book  which  boys  will  read  with  delight  and  in  which  the  heroes 
of  peace  are  made  to  seem  as  worthy  as  those  of  war. — ^Prentice  and 
Power. 
604  (7-8) 

Mowry,    W.    A.,    and    A.     M.      American    heroes    and    heroism. 

America's  great  men  and  their  deeds.)  Silver        .80 

Soldiers,   sailors,  firemen,  policemen,   pioneers,  explorers,  missionaries,  •♦ 

reformers   and   men    and    women    xmknown    to    fame,    who    have    shown 
rare   courage   in   their   quiet   lives. — Oregon. 
923  (5-7) 

Mawry,  W.  A.  and   B.  S.     American  pioneers.     (America's  great 

men  and  their  deeds.)  Silver        .96 

Sketches  of  men  and  women  foremost  in  pioneer  work  in  America, 
whether  in  exploration  and  discovery  or  in  various  reform  movements. 

—A.  L.  A. 
923  (6-8) 

Newbolt,  Sir  H.  J.     Book  of  the  long  trail.  Longmans       2.50 

Biographies  of  John  Franklin,  Richard  Burton,  David  Livingstone,  Henry 
Stanley,  Burke  and  Wills,  Francis  Yovmghusband,  Robert  Scott  and 
Alexander  Woilaston. 

923.8  (6-8) 

Parkman,  M.  R.     Fighters  for  peace.  Century      1.75 

Twelve  soldiers  and  statesmen  of  the  United  States  and  her  allies  who 
were   famous  during  the  world  war. 
923.5  (7-8) 

♦Parkman,  M.  R.     Heroes  of  today.  Century       1.75 

John  Burroughs,  John  Muir,  Wilfred  Grenfell,  Robert  F.  Scott,  Edward 
Trudeau,  Bishop  Rowe,  Jacob  A.  Riis,  Rupert  Brooke,  Herbert  C.  Hoover, 

George  Washington   Goethals,   etc. 
920  (7-8) 

*Parkman,   M.   R.     Heroines  of  service.  Century       1.75 

Mary  Lyon,  Clara  Barton,  Frances  Willard,  Julia  Ward  Howe,  Anna 
Shaw,  Mary  Antin,  Mary  Slessor,  Madame  Curie,  Jane  Addams,  Alice  C. 
Fletcher,   Alice   Freeman   Palmer,   etc. 
920.7  (7-8) 

Perry,   F.  M.     Four  American  inventors.  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

Fulton,  Whitney,  Morse  and  Edison. 
926  (5-7) 

Perry,    F.    M.,   and    Beebe,    Katherine.     Four  American   pioneers. 

Amer.  Bk.         .64 
Daniel  Boone,  George  Rogers  Clark,  David  Crockett  and  Kit  Carson. 
920  (5-8) 


66  STORIES  OF  REAL  PEOPLE 

Ponsonby,  Arthur,  and    Dorothea.     Rebels   and  reformers;    biogr- 

raphies  for  young  people.  Holt       1.60 

Contents :   Savanarola,   William   the   Silent ;   Tycho  Brahe ;   Cervantes ; 
Giordana  Bruno;   Grotius;  Voltaire;  Hans  Andersen;  Mazzini;   William 
Lloyd  Garrison;  Thoreau;  Tolstoy. 
92f3  (6-8) 

Pressey,   Park.     Vocational  reader.  Rand         .95 

Brief  articles  and  poems  about  various  occupations,  and  about  men 
and  women  who  have  attained  success  in  their  life-work. — Wisconsin. 
331  (5-8) 

Roosevelt,  Theodore,  and  Lodge,  H.  C.    Hero  tales  from  American 

history.  Century       1.90 

Americans  who  knew  how  to  live  or  die  for  their  country. 
923  (7-8) 

Rowbotham,  F.  J.    Story-lives  of  men  of  science.  Stokes       2.25 

Contents :  Lord  Bacon ;  Galileo ;  William  Harvey ;  Sir  Isaac  Newton ; 
Linnaeus;    J.    B.    Lamarock;    Sir    Humphrey    Davy;    Michael    Faraday; 
Sir   Charles  Lyell;    Sir   J.    C.    Ross;    Charles   Darwin;   Louis   Pasteur; 
Lord  Kelvin;  Lord  Lister;  Sir  William  Crookes;  M.  and  Madame  Curie. 
925  (7-8) 

*Rowoll,  Mrs.  C.  W.    Leaders  of  the  great  war.  Macmillan      1.00 

JofiTre,  Petain,  Foch,  Kitchener,  Haig,  Beatty,  Lloyd  George,  Clemen- 
ceau,  Sims,  Pershing  and  Wilson,  described  by  one  who  very  evidently 
knows  how  to  interest  as  well  as  instruct  children. — ^Bkl. 
923.5  (7-8) 

St.   Nicholas   magazine.     Stories  retold  from  St.  Nicholas. 

Century,    ea.       1.25 
Courageous  girls. 
Everyday  heroes. 
Patriotism  and  the  flag. 
Stories  of  royal  children. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Sanderson,  Edgar.    Daring  deeds  of  great  pathfinders.  Lippincott      1.75 
Pioneers  of  many  nations. 
923  (7-8) 

Seawell,  M.  E.    Twelve  naval  captains.  Scribner      1.35 

Paul   Jones,    Richard   Dale,    Truxton,    Bainbrldge,    Preble,    Decatur, 
Somers,   Hull,   Stewart,  Perry,  McDonough,  Lawrence. 
923.5  (7-8) 

Shaw,   E.   R.     Discoveries  and  explorers.   (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .52 
Historical    material    to    be    used    with    elementary    geography.     About 
Marco   Polo,   Columbus,    the    Cabots,   Balboa,    Magellan,    Cortes,   Drake, 
Hudson,  and  others.— Oregon. 
910.9  (3-5) 

Southworth,  G.  V.    Builders  of  our  country.    2  vol.  Appleton.    V.  1         .88 

V.  2         .92 

Includes  biographies  of  more  than  fifty  men  prominent  in  our  country's 
history. 
923  (6-7) 

Stevenson,  B.  E.    Guide  to  biography  for  young  readers:   Amer- 
ican men  of  action.     (Guide  ser.)  Doubleday      1.50 

Short    sketches    of    men    prominent    in    American    history,    arranged 
chronologically.    Includes  men  still  prominent  and  concerning  whom  little 
is  to  be  found  in  juvenile  literature. 
920  (6-8) 

Stimpson,  M.  S.     Child's  book  of  American  biography.  Little       1.50 

920         (4-7) 

Sweetster,  K.  D.    Ten  American  girls  from  history.  Harper       2.00 

Pocahontas,    Dorothy    Quincy,    Molly    Pitcher,    Elizabeth    Van    Lew, 
Ida  Levis,  Clara  Barton,  Virginia  Reed,  Louisa  M.  Alcott,  Clara  Morris, 
Anna  Dickinson. 
920.7  (6-8) 


BIOGRAPHY,  INDIVIDUAL,  67 

Tappan,  E.  M.    American  hero  stories,     (school  ed.)        Houghton       J. 00 
Stories    of    voyages,    explorers,    pioneers,    soldiers,    and    other    heroes 
from  the  days  of  Columbus  to  Abraham  Lincoln. — N.  Y. 
973         (4-6) 

Tappan,  E.  M.    Hero  stories  of  France.  Houghton      1.75 

944         (5-6) 

Tappan,  E.  M.    Old  world  hero  stories.  Houghton      1.16 

Practically  two  volumes  boimd  in  one.     Pt.   1 — Famous   Greeks  and 
Romans.    Pt.  2 — ^A  reprint  of  "Eiiropean  hero  stories." 
940         (5-6) 

Tomlinson,    E.   T.     Fighters   young   Americans    want    to    know. 

Appleton      2.00 
Not  stories  of  generals,  but  tales  about  men   in  the  ranks  that  are 
true  and  inspiring. — N.  J. 
923.5  (6-7) 

Towers,  W.  K.    Masters  of  space.  Harper      1.50 

Contains  an  account  of  the  telephone,  telegraph,  submarine  cable,  and 
wireless  telephone  and  telegraph. 
654  (7-8) 

Wade,  M.  H.    Leaders  to  liberty.  Little      1.65 

An  interesting  account   of  King  Alfred   of  Belgivun,   Marshall   JoCfre, 
General  Foch,   leaders  about   whom   it  is  difficult  to   find   information. 
Appeals  to  all  ages. 
923.5         (6-8) 
♦Wade,   M.  H.     Light-bringers.  Little      1.65 

Simply  told   biography   of   Robert  Peary,   Clara   Barton,    the    Wright 
brothers,  Julia  Ward  Howe,  Marconi  and  Amundsen. 
923  (6-8) 

♦Wade,   M.   H.     Pilgrims  of  today.  Little       1.155 

What  America  has  meant  in  the  lives  of  John  Muir,  Jacob  Rlis,  Mary 
Antin,  E.  A,   Steiner,   Carl   Schurz,  Nathan  Strauss,  Joseph  Pulitzer. 
920.02  (6-8) 

♦Wade,  M.  H.    Wonder-workers.  Little      l.«5 

Seven  stories  for  boys  and  girls  of  from   10  to  15   of  some  of  our 
present-day   magic   workers:     Burbank,   Helen   Keller,   William   George, 
Edison,  Jane  Addams,  Dr.   Grenfell  and  Judge  Lindsay. 
923  (6-7) 

♦Wildman,  Edwin.   Famous  leaders  of  industry.    2  vol.     Page.    ea.       2.00 
1st   ser.    Bell,    Hudson   Maxim,    Rockefeller,    Wanamaker,    McCormick, 
Heinz,  Edison,  Barnum,   Westinghouse,    Wright  brothers,  Henry  Ford. 

2d  ser.  Carnegie,  Hoover,  Wrigley,  Samuel  Colt,  Harriman,  Pullman, 
Du  Pont,  James  J.  Hill,  Goethals,  Comiskey,  Liggett,  Mellon,  Munsey. 
923.8  (6-8) 

♦Williams,  Sherman.     Some  successful  Americans.  Ginn         .72 

Partial   contents :   Lincoln,   Peter   Cooper,   Louisa   M.    Alcott,   Greeley, 
Cornelius  Vanderbilt,  Eli  Whitney,  Franklin. 
920  (6-8) 

Wood,  Eric.    Boys'  book  of  pioneers.  Funk       2.00 

Pioneer  trappers,   miners,   scientists,   explorers,   inventors,   railroaders, 
and  discoverers  of  the  poles. 
920  (7-8) 

BIOGRAPHY,  INDIVIDUAL. 

Alcott,  L.  M.    Moses,  Belle.    Louisa  May  Alcott.  Appleton      1.75 

A  great  favorite  with  all  readers  of  Alcott. 
A1.92  (6-7) 

Andersen,    H.  C.     Harboe,   P.     Child's   story  of   Hans   Christian 

Andersen.  Duffield       1.75 

An  interesting  biography  for  children. 
An.92         (7-8) 
♦Antin,    Mary.      At    school    in    the    promised    land.      (Riverside 

literature  ser.)  Houghton        .48 

An    extract    from    "The   promised    lj»nd,"    dealing    with    the    author's 
school  life. 
An.92         (5-7) 


68  BIOGRAPHY,  INDIVIDUAL. 

Antin,  Mary.    Promised  land.  Houghton      2.50 

A  Russian  immigrant  tells  the  true  story  of  what  America  meant  to  her, 
An.92         (6-8) 

*Bok,  Edward.     Dutch  boy  fifty  years  after.  Scribner         .80 

Abridged   from    "The   Americanization    of   Edward   Bok."     A   story   of 
pluck,  ambition  and  hard  work,  stimulating  and  amusing. 
Bo.92  (7-8) 

Columbus,  Brooks,  E.   S.     True  story  of  Christopher  Columbus. 

Lothrop       2.00 
Co.92         (6-7) 

Columbus.     Imlach,    G.    M.         Story    of    Columbus.      (Children's 

heroes.)  Dutton       1.00 

Small,  well-written,  and  attractively  illustrated  in  colors. 
Co.92  (5-8) 

Cromwell.    Ross,  Estelle.    Oliver  Cromwell.     (Heroes  of  all  time.) 

Stokes       1.50- 
Can  be  used  to  supplement  school  histories. — ^A.  L.  A. 
Cr.92          (7-8) 

Edison.     Meadowcroft,  W.  H.     Boy's  life  of  Edison.  Harper       1.75 

A  biography  very  popular  with  young  people. 
Ed.92         (7-8) 

Franklin,  Benjamin.     Autobiogrraphy.     (Riverside  literature  ser.) 

Houghton        .56 
Fr.92         (7-8) 
Geronimo.     Story  of  Ms  life,  by  (3«ronimo;  ed.  by  S.  M.  Barrett. 

DufCield       1.6«- 
Ge.92         (7-8) 
Grant.    Coombs,  L.    U.  S.  Grant.  Macmillan       1.00 

Gr.92         (5-7) 

Grant.     Nicolay,  Helen.    Boys'  life  of  Ulysses  S.  Grant.  Century      1.75 
Based  on  Grant's  personal  memoirs.     The  best  life  for  children,  but 
eqxially  adapted  for  adults  wishing  a  simple  account. 
Gr.92         (6-8) 

Grant  and  Lee.    Hill,  F.  T.    On  the  trail  of  Grant  and  Lee. 

Appleton      2.00 
Vivid  account  of  these  two  great  generals. 
Gr.92         (7-8) 

Jeanne  d'  Arc.     Smith,  M.  S.  C.     Maid  ot  Orleans.  Crowell      1.75 

Story  of  Joan  of  Arc  for  girls. 
Je.92f         (6-7) 

Jeanne  d'  Arc.    Wilmot-Buxton,  E.  M.    Jeanne  d'  Arc.        Stokes       1.50 
Story  of  the  Maid  told  with  deep  sympathy. 
Je.92         (7-8) 

Keller,  Helen.    Story  of  my  life.  Doubleday      1.90 

Grosset       1.00 
The  autobiography  of  a  girl  who  has  been  blind  and  deaf  from  baby- 
hood. 
Ke.92         (7-8) 

Lafayette.    Holland,  R.  S.    Lafayette,  we  come.  Jacobs      1.60  - 

A  story  of  France  in  America  and  America  in  France. 
La.92         (5-8) 

Lafayette.    Brooks,  E.  S.    True  story  of  Lafayette.  Lothrop       2.00 

A  short  biography  which  may  be  read  for  the  pictures  from  French  life 
and  history  as  well  as  for  the  story  of  the  American  revolution. — Oregon. 
La.92         (5-7) 

Lafayette.    Nicolay,  Helen.    Boys'  life  of  Lafayette.  Harper      1.75  . 

La.92        (7-8) 


BIOGRAPHY,  INDIVIDUAL  69 

Lee.     Oilman,  Bradley.     Robert  B.  Lee.     (True  stories  of  great 

Americans.)  Macmillan       1.00 

Le.92         (4-6) 

Lee.    Hamilton,  J.  G.  de  R.,  and  Mrs.  M.  C.    Life  of  Robert  E.  Lee 

for  boys  and  girls.  Houghton       1.65 

The  noble  spirit  with  which  he  accepted  defeat  has  made  him  one  of 
the  great  men  of  our  nation. 
Le.S^         (6-8) 

Lincoln.     Baldwin,  James.     Abraham  Lincoln.  Amer,  Bk.         .72 

Gives  an  excellent  idea  of  political  conditions  and  instills  patriotism. 

—A.  L.  A. 
Li.92  (6-8) 

Lincoln.    Brooks,  E.  S.     True  story  of  Abraham  Lincoln.  Lothrop       2.00 
Deals  for  the  most  part  with  Lincoln's  early  life. 
Li.92  (7-8) 

Lincoln.     Hamilton,  M.  A,     Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln  for  boys 

and  girls.  Dutton       1.00 

Li.92         (6-7) 

Lincoln.     Moores,  C.  W.     Life  of  Abraham  Lincoln.     (Riverside 

literature  ser.)  Houghton        .48 

Graphic  account  of  the  most  important  facts  and  events,  giving  an  ex- 
cellent presentation  of  Lincoln's  character  and  achievements. — ^A.  L.  A. 
Li.92  (6-8) 

Lincoln.    Nicolay,  Helen.    Boys'  life  of  Abraham  Lincoln.  Century       1.75 
One  of  the  best  short  biographies.  -• 

Li.92  (7-8) 

Lincoln.     Tarbell,  I.  M.     Boy  scout's  life  of  Lincoln.     Macmillan       2.00 
A  worthy  and  beautiful  story  of  the  real  Lincoln. 
Li.92  (6-8) 

Napoleon.     Foa,  Eugenia.     Boys'  life  of  Napoleon;   adapted  from 

the  French  by  E.  S.  Brooks.  Lothrop       2.00 

Na.92         (5-7) 
Nightingale.     Steedman,   Amy.     Florence   Nightingale;    abridged 

ed.  Nelson        .75 

A  vivid  picture  of  a  beautiful  life. 

Ni.92  (7-8) 

Perry.    Barnes,  James.  Hero  of  Lake  Erie.  Appleton      1.50 

The  story  of  Oliver  Hazard  Perry  and  the  battle  of  Lake  Erie. 

Pe.92  (7-8) 

Roosevelt.    Hagedorn,  Hermann.    Boys'  and  girls'  life  of  Theodore 

Roosevelt.  Harper       1.75 

Roosevelt,  boy  and  man.     The  life  and  spirit  of  the  man  is  revealed 
to  a  remarkable  extent  in  these   pages. 
Ro.92  (7-8) 

Roosevelt,  Theodore.    Letters  to  his  children;  ed.  by  J.  B.  Bishop. 

Scribner      2.50 
One   hundred   letters   written   during   a    period    of   more   than    twenty 
years.      Some    are    "picture    letters"    with   crude    pen-and-ink   drawings 
expressing   Koosevelt's   abounding   humor. 
Ro.92  (5-8) 

Twain,  Mark,  pseud.     Paine,  A.  B.     Boy's  life  of  Mark  Twain. 

Harper       1.75 
Interesting  to  all  readers  of  Mark  Twain. 
Tw.92         (7-8) 
Victoria.    Tappan,  E.  M.    In  the  days  of  Queen  Victoria.  Lothrop      1.50 
Biography  in  story  form,  entertaining  and  Instructive. — Wisconsin. 
Vi.92  (6-8) 

Washington,  Booker  T.    Up  from  slavery.  Burt      1.25 

Human  and  inspiring,  giving  a  record  of  hia  ideals  and  achievements. 
Wa.92         (7-8) 


70  AMERICAN   HISTORY 

Washington,    George.      Brooks,    E.    S.      True    story    of    George 

Washington.  Lothrop       2.00 

Tells  the  facts  entertainingly  and  from  a  child's  point  of  view.    The 
book  is  printed   in   large,   clear   type   and  is   well   illustrated   and   well 
bound, 
Wa.92  (4-6) 

Washington,   George.     Hill,   F.   T.     On  the  trail   of  Washington, 

Appleton       2.50 
Wa.92  (6-8) 

Washington,  George.  Scudder,  H.  E.    George  Washington,  (River- 
side literature  ser.)  Houghton         .56 

A  biography  of  the  best  class  for  young  people, 
Wa.92         (7-8) 

Washington,  George.   Seelye,  E.  E.  Story  of  Washington.  Appleton       2.50 
Tells  many  stories  and  anecdotes  of  Washington's  life   and   contains 
many  illustrations. — Pittsburgh, 
Wa.92         (6-7) 

Washington,  George.    Walker  J.  1.2^ 

Written  for  younger  readers  in  "story  telling  gtyl«." 
Wa.92  (5-7) 

AMERICAN  HISTORY. 

Bailey,  C.  S.    Boys  and  girls  of  colonial  days.  Flanagan         ,85 

917.3  (4-6) 

Bishop,    Farnham.       Panama,   past  and   present.  Century       1.75 

Written  primarily  for  boys.     The  greater  part  of  this  book  is  devoted 
to  history.     Good  illustrations. 
986  (6-8) 

Blaisdell,  A.  F.,  and  Ball,  F.  K.    American  history  for  little  folks. 

Little      1,3a 
Tells  of   Coliunbus,   Benjamin  Franklin,   the  man   without   a   coxmtry, 
the  Alamo  and  other  similar  stories. — ^Bkl. 
973  (3-5) 

Blaisdell,   A.   F.,   and    Ball,    F.    K.     Hero   stories   from  American 

history.  Ginn         .8t 

"Notable  and  dramatic  events." 
973  (5-7) 

Blaisdell,   A.   F.,   and    Baill,   F.   K.     Short  stories   from  American 

history.  Ginn         .72 

Stories  of  George  Rogers  Clark,  Nathan  Hale,  "Old  Ironsides,"  battle 
of  New  Orleans,  Lafayette's  visit  to  the  United  States  and  others. 

—Pittsburgh, 
973  (5-7) 

Catherwood,  M.  H.    Heroes  of  the  middle  west;  the  French.  Ginn         .72 
Children  like  the  author's  account  of  LaSalle. 
977  (5-7) 

Coffin,  0.  C.    Boys  of  '76.  Harper       2,50 

The   brave    deeds,   sufferings,    victories   and   defeats    of   the   American 
Revolution. 
973.3  (6-8) 

Coffin,  C.  C.   Boys  of  '61.  Page       2.5(^ 

Soldier's   life   during   the   Civil   War,    in   the   hospital,   on   the   march 
and  in  the  hour  of  battle.     Originally  letters  of  a  war  correspondent. 

— Pittsbxurgh. 
973.7  (6-8) 

Collins,  F.  A.    Fighting  engineers.  Century      1.7& 

Their  part  in  the  world  war. 
940.91  (7-8) 

Deming,  N.  H.,  and   Bemis,   K.   I.,  eds.     Stories  of  patriotism. 

Houghton         .8t 
Stories  and  verse  about  heroes  and  heroines  of  American  history  from 
colonial  times  through  the  European  war. — Bkl. 
973  (5-7) 


AMERICAN   HISTORY  71 

Drake,  S.  A.     On  Plymouth  rock.  Lothrop         .76 

Based  largely  on  Governor  Bradford's  history  of  the  first  two  years  of 
the  life  of  the  Plymouth  colonists. 

974.2  (3-7) 

Earle,  Mrs.  Alice.    Home  life  in  colonial  days.     (Standard  library.) 

Macmillan       3.50 
Very  interesting  and  instructive. 

917.3  (6-8) 

Eggleston,  Edward.     First  book  in  American  history.     Amer.  Bk.         .88 
In  biographical  form.     A  most  attractive  presentation. 
973  .       (3-5) 

Eggleston,   Edward.     Household   history  of   the  United   States. 

Appleton       4.00 
A  good,  complete  history  for  children's  use.    Many  pictures  and  maps. 
973  (7-8) 

Eggleston,    Edward.      Stories   of   American    life   and   adventures. 

Amer.  Bk.         .64 
Stories  of  Indian  and  frontier  life,  adventures  with  pirates  and  kid- 
nappers of  colonial  times.     Appeals  to  boys. 
973.2  (3-4) 

Foote,   A.    E.,   and'  Skinner,   A.   W.     Explorers   and   founders    of 

America.      (Eclectic  reading-s.)  Amer.   Bk.         .92 

Biographical  sketches  from  earliest  days  to  time  of  Bevolution. 

— Wisconsin. 
973.1  (5-6) 

Gordy,  W.  F.   Stories  of  American  explorers:  an  historical  reader 

Scribner         .!♦ 
Stories  and  biographical  sketches  that  present  history  vividly  to  the 
child. 

973.1  (5-7) 

Griffis,  W.  E.    Young  people's  history  of  the  Pilgrims.     Houghton       3.00 
Very  complete,  with  prominence  given  to  things  seen  by  the  Pilgrim 
boys  and  girls. 

973.2  (6-8) 

Hall,  Jennie.    Our  ancestors  in  Europe;  an  introduction  to  Ameri- 
can history.  Silver       1.Z8 
Useful  and   interesting,   with  important  maps. 

940  (6-8) 

-f- 
Hart,  A.  B.,  ed.  and  others.     Source  readers  in  American  hitsory. 
4  vol.  Macmillan 

No.  1.     Colonial  children  1.48 

No.  2.     Camps  and  firesides   of  the  Revolution.  1.60 

No.  3.     How    our    grandfathers    lived.  1.6(K 

No.  4.     Romance  of  the  Civil  war.  1.60 

An  introduction  to  leading  sources  In  American  history  and  less  known 
literature  of  the  times. 
973  (7-8) 

Holland,   R.  S.     Historic  events   of  colonial   days.  Jacobs       2.00 

A  collection  of  ten  historic  incidents  grouped  around  famous  persons 
of  the  colonies,  such  as  Roger  Williams,  Peter  Stuyvesant,  Nathaniel 
Bacon,  Ethan  Allen,  and  telling  of  the  witchcraft  in  Massachusetts,  the 
pirates  of  Charles  Town  harbor,  the  Green  Mountain  boys,  the  attack 
on  the  Deleware,  etc. — ^A.  L.  A. 
973.2  (7-8) 

Lucia,  Rose.    Stories  of  American  discoverers  for  little  Americans. 

(Eclectic  readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .6t 

Simple    stories   admirably    fulfilling   their   purpose,    "so    to   deal   with 
the   adventures   and   adventurers   that   the   first   touch   of   history    shall 
come  to  the  pupil  in  the  form  of  tales  as  amazing  as  those  In  the  well- 
loved  fairy  books." — ^A.  L.  A. 
973.1  (3-4) 


72  INDIANS 

Neihardt,  J.  G.     Splendid  wayfaring.  Macmillan      1.75 

Story  of  the  opening  of  the  great  central  route  to  the  west.    More 
interesting  than  fiction. 
973.5  (7-8) 

Nicolay,  Helen.     Our  nation  in  the  building.  Century       3.50 

An  account  of  the  first  seventy  years  of  the  republic. 
973  (8) 

Parkman,  Francis.  Boys'  Parkman,  selections  from  the  historical 
works  of  Francis  Parkman;  comp.  by  Louise  S.  Hasbrouck. 
(school  ed.)  Little         .90 

Contains   much    of   Indian    tribes    and   traditions,    and    the    story    of 
LaSalle. 

973.2  (7-8) 

Persons,  E.  A.,  comp.     Our  country  in  poem  and  prose.  (Eclectic 

readings.)  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

Will  arouse  pupils'  interest  in  American  history. 
973  (5-8) 

Prescott,  D.  R.    Day  in  a  colonial  home,     (school  ed.)  Jones         .60 

A  slight  story  with  illustrations  and  notes  of  every  detail  of  furniture. 

917.3  (5-7) 

Roosevelt,  Theodore.     Stories  of  the  great  west.  Century       1.75 

Ten  stories  of  frontier  and  ranch  life  from  "Hero  tales,"  "Winning  of 
the  west,"  "Ranch  life"  and  "The  hunting  trail." 
917.8  (6-7) 

Sabin,  E.  L.    Boys'  book  of  frontier  fighters.  Jacobs       2.00 

Thrilling  stories  of  famous  scouts  and  pioneers. 
973.5  (6-8) 

St.  Nicholas  magazine.     American  historical  stories,  retold  from 

St.  Nicholas.  Century,     ea.       1.25 

Colonial  stories. 
Revolutionary  stories. 
Civil  war  stories. 
Our  national  holidays. 
Stories  of  travel. 
Fiction         (4-7) 
Stone,  G.  L.,  and   Fickett,   M.   G.     Everyday  life  in  the  colonies. 

Heath         .72 
Graphic  stories  of  early  customs  and  celebrations. — ^Wisconsin. 
917.3          (4-6) 
Tappan,  E.  M.    Elementary  history  of  our  country.         Houghton       1.08 
The  author  has  succeeded  in  being  simple  without  being  trivial. 
973  (5-6) 

Usher,  R.  G.     Story  of  the  Pilgrims  for  children.  Macmillan       1.50 

Leading  historical  characters  are  made  to  stand  out  distinctly  In  the 
rarrutive. 
973.2  (4-5) 

Wright,   H.  C.     Children's  stories  in  American  history.      (School 

reading.)  Scribner         .76 

Twenty-five  stories  from  early  American  history  including  the  mound 
builders  and  Aztecs,  the  early  explorers  and  Indian  chiefs. 
973  (6-8) 

INDIANS. 

Bayliss,  C.  K.    Treasury  of  Indian  tales.  Crowell         .75 

All  school   children   know   the   myths   of   other   lands.     These   Indian 

tales   and   legends   will   make   them   familiar   with   some   of   their    own 

land. 

398.2         (4-6) 
Bemister,   Margaret.     Indian  legends;    stories  of  America  before 

Columbus.  Macmillan         .80 

398.097  (4-6) 

Brown,  A.  F.,  and  Bell,  J.  M.    Tales  of  the  red  children.    Appleton       1.75 

398.2         (3-4) 


HtSARMSTURNED  TO  BRANCHES 
AND  HIS  HAIR  TO  LEAVES 


FROM   "A  TREASURY  OF  INDIAN  TALES" 

BY  CLARA  KERN   BAYLISS 

PUBLISHED  BY  THOMAS  Y.   CROWELL  COMPANY 


V 


INDIANS  73 

Catlin,  George.    Boys'  Catlin;  my  life  among  the  Indians;   ed.  by 

M.  G.  Humphries.  Scribner       2.00 

The  most  interesting  portions  of  Catlin' s  Letters  and  notes  on  the 
manners,  customs  and  conditions  of  the  North  American  Indians  con- 
densed and  rearranged  for  boys'  reading.  Illustrations  from  author's 
original  drawings. — ^A.  L.  A.  Contains  biographical  sketch  of  author. 
970.2  (6-8) 

Chadwick,  M.  L.  P.    Legends  of  the  red  children;  a  supplementary 

reader.  Amer.  Bk.         .52 

398.2  (3-5) 

Deming,  E.  W.,  and  Mrs.  T.  O.  Little  brothers  of  the  West.  Stokes       1.75 
Written  for  children  and  made  attractive  by  many  full  page  colored 

plates  after  paintings  in  water  colors. — Prentice  and  Power. 
Published  also  in  two  parts:  Little  red  people  and  Little  Indian  folks. 

Fiction         (1-2) 

Deming,  E.  W.,  and  Mrs.  T.  O.    Little  brothers  of  the  west.  Stokes       1.75 
An  attractive  picture  book  for  the  littlest  ones. 
Fiction         (2-3) 

Drake,  F.  S.    Indian  history  for  young  folks.  Harper       3.00 

Up-to-date   standard  history,   still   in  demand. — ^Moore. 

970.1  (7-8) 

Eastman,  Charles.    Indian  boyhood.  Little       2.50 

The  author  Is  a  man  of  culture  and  a  Sioux  Indian,  who  lived  the  life 
of  the  "wild  Sioux"  in  the  northwest  until  about  fifteen  years  of  age. 

970.2  (7-8) 

Eastman,  Charles.    Indian  heroes  and  great  chieftains.  Little      1.75 

Biographies  of  Red  Cloud,  Little  Crow,  Crazy  Horse,  Sitting  Bull,  Little 
Wolf  and  Chief  Joseph,  written  by  a  member  of  their  own  race. 
970.2  (6-8) 

Eastman,  E.  G.    Indian  legends  retold.  Little      1.60 

Tales  of  the   PImas,    Cherokees,   Choctaws,   Iroquois,    Tslmshians   and 
Alaskans. 
398.2         (5-6) 

Hen-Toh.    Tales  of  the  bark  lodge.  Harlow      1.50 

Wyandot  Indian  stories. 
398.2  (6-8) 

Howard,  O.  O.    Famous  Indian  chiefs  I  have  known.         Century      1.75 
Indian  leaders  from   Osceola  the   Seminole  to  Geronimo. 
970.2  (7-8) 

Hulst,  C.  S.    Indian  sketches.  Longmans        .75 

Some  of  the  beautiful  and  heroic  tales  of  the  red  men  of  the  North- 
west territory. — ^A.  L.  A, 
970.2  (6-8) 

Jenks,  A.  E.   Childhood  of  Ji-Shib,  the  Ojibwa.   Atkinson,  Mentzer        .50 
Reveals  the  real  life  and  soul  of  the  Indian  boy. — N.  Y. 
Fiction         (4-6) 

Judd,   M.  C.    Wigwam  stories  told  by  North  American  Indians. 

Ginn        .92 
Includes  not  only  myths,  but  traditions  and  customs. — Wisconsin. 
398.2  (4-6) 

Lummis,  C.  F.     Pueblo  Indian  folk-storiea.  Century      1.75 

398.2  (7-8) 

Nixon- Roulet,  M.  F.    Indian  folk  tales.  Amer.  Bk.         .56 

398.2         (5-6) 
Phillips,   W.  S.     Sandman:   his  Indian  stories.  Page       1.75 

The  Indian's  beliefs,  his  religion,  his  dreams,  his  mysticisms,  and  his 
manner  of  living. 
398.2         (5-7) 

Sabin,  E.  L.    Boys'  book  of  Indian  warriors.  Jacobs       2.00 

Stories  of  more  than  forty  famous  Indians.     Illustrations  from  photo- 
graphs. 
970.2  (6-8) 


74  ENGLISH  HISTORY,  GENERAL  HISTORY 

8t.  Nicholas  magazine.     Indian  stories  retold  from  St.  Nicholas. 

Century       1.25 
Work  and  play  of  Indian  boys  and  girls. 
Fiction         (4-7) 

Schultz,  J.  W.    With  the  Indians  in  the  Rockies.  Houghton      1.75 

A  boy's  experience  at  a  trading  post  during  the  winter  of  1885. 
Fiction         (7-8) 

Whitney,  E.  L.,  and  Perry,  F.  M.  Four  American  Indians:  King 
Philip,  Tecumseh,  Pontiac  and  Osceola;  a  book  for  young 
Americans.  Amer.  Bk.         .64 

970.2         (4-6) 

Wilson,  G.  L.    Indian  hero  tales.  Amer.  Bk.         .60 

Legends  of  the  Micmacs,  Penobscot  and  Passamaquoddy   tribes. 
398.2  (2-4) 

Wilson,  G.  L.     Myths  of  the  red  children.  Ginn         .76 

Excellent  little  book  of  Indian  stories  from  a  dozen  different  tribes. 
Well   illustrated  with  pictures  of  Indian   implements,   weapons,   shelters, 
costumes,    etc.    and    a    supplementary    chapter    telling    children    how    to 
make  these  interesting  things. — N.  Y. 
398.2  (4-5) 

Wood,  N.  B.    Lives  of  famous  Indian  chiefs.  Whitman       2.00 

Includes   Powhatan,   Pontiac,   Logan,   Brant,    Tecumseh,   Black   Hawk, 
Sitting  Bull,  Rain-in-the-face,  Joseph,  Geronimo  and  others. 
970.2  (6-8) 

Zitkala-Sa.     Old  Indian  legends.  (Jinn         .76 

The  book  is  well  illustrated  by  the  Indian  artist,  Angen  DeCora. 
398.2  (4-5) 

ENGLISH   HISTORY. 

Blaisdell,    A.    F.,    and    Ball,    F.    K.     English   history    story   book. 

(school  ed.)  Little         .8d 

The    riches    of    English    history    are   the    rightful    inheritance    of    the 
American  child.     These  stories  have  interest  in  themselves  sufficient  to 
greatly  attract. — Prentice  and  Power. 
942  (5-6) 

Guerber,    H.   A.     Story  of   the   English.      (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.    Bk.         .80 
942          (5-7) 
Quennell,  Marjorie,  and  C.  H.  B.     History  of  everyday  things  in 

England.       2  vol.  Scribner.     ea.       4.00 

In  two  parts.  Pt.  1,  1066-1499.  Pt.  2,  1500-1700.  Drawings,  colored 
and  black  and  white,  and  interesting  descriptions  of  the  life  of  English- 
men during  the  middle  Ages,  what  they  wore,  ate,  played,  worked  at,  etc. 
The  second  volume  describes  the  changes  in  these  things  at  the  be- 
ginning of  the  modern  period. 
The  unusual  quality  of  the  book  is  a  compensation  for  its  expense. 

— Bkl. 
914.2  (6-8) 

Tappan,  E.  M.    In  the  days  of  Alfred  the  Great.  Lothrop       1.50 

Miss  Tappan's  telling  of  the  story  of  the  great  English  king  has  a 
quiet  beauty  and  power. — Prentice  and  Power. 
A1.92  (6-7) 

GENERAL  HISTORY. 

Baldwin,  James.    Fifty  famous  rides  and  riders.  Amer.  Bk.         .72 

Rides  famous  in  history   and  fiction,   both  prose   and   verse. — N.    Y. 
904  (5-8) 

Baldwin,  James.    Fifty  famous  stories  retold.  Amer.  Bk.         .56 

Half  legendary  and  historical  stories  which  belong  to  young  children 
for    their    historical    allusion,    moral    truth    and    Imaginative    quality. 

— Cleveland. 
904  (2-4) 


GENERAL  HISTORY 


75 


Baldwin,  James.    Thirty  more  famous  stories  retold.        Amer.  Bk.        .12 
Partial  contents:  Coliimbus  and  the  egg,  Galileo  and  the  lamps.  Sir 
Isaac  Newton  and  the  apple,  Webster  and  the  woodchuck.  The  Gordian 
knot,  Frederick  Barbarossa,  Crossing  the  Rubicon. 
904  (4-5) 

Brooks,  E.  S.     Chivalric  days.  Putnam      1.75 

Stories  of  boys  and  girls  of  many  times  and  places. 
904  (6-8) 

Dutton,    M.    B.     Little  stories   of  France.        (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .60 
A  good  first  book.     The  stories  are  chiefly  biographical. 
944  (6-7) 

Dutton,   M.   B.     Little  stories   of  Germany,      (Eclectic   readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.         .60 

943  (6-7) 

tFraser,  C.  C.     Boys'  book  of  battles;    the  stories  of  11  famous 

land  combats.  Crowell      1.75 

Bunker    Hill,    Saratoga,    Yorktown,    Austerlitz,    Waterloo,    Gettysburg, 
Sedan,  Verdun,  Second  Marne,  Argonne-Meuse,  Ypres. 
904  (7-8) 

Griffis,  W.  E.    Young  people's  history  of  Holland.  Houghton      1.75 

Most  space  given  to  the  picturesque  part  of  the  story  of  the  Nether- 
lands. 
949.2  (7-8) 

Guerber,    H.  A.     Story   of  modern  France.      (Eclectic   readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .80^ 
Outline  of  French  history  since  1715. 

944  (5-6) 

Guerber,  H.  A.     Story  of  old  France.     (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .80 
A  companion  volume  to  "Story  of  modem  France." 
944  (5-6) 

Guerber,  H.  A.    Story  of  the  Greeks.     (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .72 
Principally  biographical. 
938  (6-8) 

Guerber,  H.  A.     Story  of  the  Romans.     (Eclectic  readings.) 

Amer.  Bk.        .72 

The  main  facts  told  simply  and  directly,  giving  a  general  idea  of  the 
heroes  of  Roman  history. — Oregon. 
937  (6-8) 

Jacobs,  Joseph.    Book  of  wonder  voyages.  Putnam       1.75 

Tales  of  voyages  of  fascination  and  mystery  as  told  in  many  lands. 
398.2          (6-8) 

Johonnot,  James.     Grandfather's  stories.  Amer.  Bk.        .62 

Fables,  a  fairy  story  or  tvro,  with  some  myths  and  legends. 
Fiction         (3-4) 

Johonnot,  James.     Stories  of  the  olden  time.  Amer.  Bk.        .68 

Myths,  parables  and  fables,  legends,  old  ballads  and  history,  carefully 
edited. 
904  (4-7) 

Kelman,  J.  H.   Stories  from  the  Ousades.  (Stories  from  history.) 

Button       1.00 

Told  in  clear  and  simple  style.     Illustrated  in  •olors. 
940.4  (5-6) 

Newbolt,  Sir  H.J.    Book  of  the  happy  warrior.  Longmans      2.50 

Contents:   Song  of   Roland;   Richard   Coeur-de-Lion ;   St.    Louis,   king 
of  France;  Robin  Hood;  Bertrand  du  Guesclin  and  the  Black  Prince; 
Nevirs    from    Poitiers,    1356;    Chevalier    Bayard;    Old    English    school; 
Chivalry  of  today. 
940.4  (6-8) 


76  GENERAL  HISTORY 

Roe,  A.  S.    Stories  from  Chinese  history.  Stokes       1.25 

951         (4-6) 

Rolt- Wheeler,  Francis.     Boys'  book  of  the  world  war.       Lothrop       2f.50 
Best  brief  history  for  children.    Concise,  complete  and  will  be  eagerly 
read. 
940.9          (6-8) 

St.    Nicholas   magazine.     Ancient  historical  stories,   retold   from 

St.  Nicholas.  Century,     ea.       1.25 

Stories  of  the  ancient  world. 

Stories  of  the  classic  myths. 

Stories  of  Greece  and  Rom.e. 

Stories  of  the  middle  ag-es. 

Stories  of  chivalry. 
Fiction         (4-8) 

Tappan,  E.  M.    Story  of  the  Greek  people,     (school  ed.)  Houghton       1.32 
Chief  historical  events,  the  customs  of  the  people,  and  their  manner  of 
living  and  thinking  are  pictured.     Many  carefully  chosen  illustrations. 
938         (5-6) 

Tappan,  E.  M.    Story  of  the  Roman  people,  (school  ed.)  Houghton       1.32 
Good  elementary  history,  carrying  the  story  from  Aeneas  to  the  fall  of 
the  western  empire.    Many  of  the  illustrations  are  from  paintings,  statues 
and  antique  drawings. — A.  L.  A. 
937         (5-6) 

Van  Bergen,  Robert.    Story  of  China.  Amer.  Bk.        .76 

Well  written.     On  the  country,  the  people  and  their  history.     Rather 
too  detailed  for  general  use,  but  excellent  for  older  people. — Oregon, 
951  (7-8) 

Van  Loon,  H.  W.    Story  of  mankind.  Boni  &  Liveright      5.00 

Comprehensive  history  of  man  from  earliest  to  present  times.    Awarded 
prize  for  best  children's  book  for  year  1921. 
909         (7-8) 


REFERENCE  BOOKS  FOR  SCHOOLROOM  LIBRARIES  77 

REFERENCE  BOOKS. 
FOR  SCHOOLROOM   LIBRARIES. 

Appleton's  new  practicjal  cyclopaedia.    6  vol.  Appleton    30.00 

Recommended  for  small  libraries  or  srraramar  schools  unable  to  afford 
one  of  the  larger  cyclopaedias.     Articles  are  very  brief,  but  up  to  date 
and  simply  written;  system  of  cross  reference  is  good.     Good  illustrations 
and  maps.     Excellent   indexes. — A.   L.   A. 
r030 

Bartlett,  John.    Familiar  quotations.     9th  ed.  Little      4.50 

Collections  of  passages,  phrases  and  proverbs,  both  poetical  and  prose, 
giving  sources   in  ancient  and  modern   literature,    chronologic   arrange- 
ment.    Index  of  authors  and  of  most  important  words  of  quotations. 
r808.8 

Brown,  Zaidee.     Directions  for  the  librarian  of  a  small  library. 

Wilson         .25 
Simple   directions,   intended  for   librarians   without   training,   and   for 
libraries  of  a  few  hundred  voliunes. 
r020 

Champlin,  J.    D.     Young   folks'    cyclopaedia   of   common   things. 

Holt      3.00 
r031 

Champlin,  J.  D.     Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  literature  and  art. 

Holt       3.00 

r803 

Champlin,  J.  D.    Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  persons  and  places. 

Holt       3.00 

r903 

Champlin,  J.  D.,  and   Lucas,  F.  A.     Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of 

natural  history.  Holt       3.00 

r570.3 

Cram,  G.  F.     Army  and  navy  edition  of  Cram's  quick  reference 
atlas  and  gazetteer  of  the  world;    ed.  by  Eugene  Murray- 
Aaron.    Cram.     (G.   F.   Cram,    111   N.   Market  St.,    Chicago.)       1.50 
r900 
Dana,  Mrs.  W.  S.    How  to  know  the  wild  flowers.  Scribner      3.00 

rrofusely  and  beautifully  illustrated.     An  aid  to  the  identification  of 
flowers   by    those   having    little   or   no   knowledge    of    scientific    botany. 

— ^Prentice  and  Power. 
580 

Funk  and  Wagnall's  Concise  standard  dictionary:   abridged  from 

New  standard  dictionary.  Funk        .75 

Orthography,    pronunciation    and    meaning    of    about    35,000    words. 
An  up-to-date  and  handy  dictionary   for   desk  and  home   use. 
r423 

Helprin,  Louis.    Historical  reference  book.  Appleton      3.00 

A    chronological    dictionary    of    universal    history,    a     biographical 

dictionary. 
Quite  the  most  compact,  convenient,  accurate  and  authoritative  work 

of  the  kind  in  the  language. — Nation. 

r909 

Lane,  M.  A.  L.,  and  Hill,  Mable,  eds.  American  history  in  litera- 
ture. Ginn         .80 

Collection    of    prose    and    poetry    illustrating    the    leading    events    in 
American  history. — Wisconsin. 
973 

Mackey,  M.  G.,  and  M.  S.,  comps.  Pronunciation  of  10,000  proper 
names,  giving  geographical  and  biographical  names,  names 
of  books,  works  of  art,  characters  in  fiction,  foreign  titles, 
etc.  Dodd       1.76 

r4Z1.9 

Mathews,  F.  8.    Field  book  of  American  wild  flowers.      Putnam      3.60 
580 


78  REFERENCE  BOOKS  FOR  SCHOOLROOM  LTBRARIBS 

Miller,  Zana   K.     How  to  organize  a  library.     Library  Bureau.       Free 
This   beginners  pamphlet   may   be   secured   without   cost   by   applying 
to  the  Oklahoma  Library  Commission,  State  Capitol. 

New  international  encyclopaedia.    2d  ed.  24  vol.  buckram  binding. 

Dodd  168.00 
r030 

Redway,  J.  W.     Commercial  geography.  Scribner       1.60 

Clear    arrangement,    marginal    guide    notes,    excellent    indexes    and 
suggestive   questions   at  the   end   of   each   chapter  make   it   a   desirable 
reference  book. 
910 

Robbins,  E.  C.    High  school  debate  book.  McClurg      1.25 

Tells  how  to  organize  a  debate,  gives  briefs,  outlines  and  bibliographies 
on  many  of  the  leading  questions  of  the  day. 
808.5 

Robert,  J.  T.    Primer  of  parliamentary  law  for  schools,  colleges, 

clubs,  fraternities,  etc.  Doubleday       1.00 

Excellent  manual.     Simple,   clear.  In  form  of  lessons,   with   question 
reviews. — Pittsburgh. 
328.1 

Schauffler,  R.  H.,  ed.    Our  American  holidays.     10  vol.  Moffat,    ea.       1.50 
Each    volume    contains   an    historical    account    of   the    origin    of   the 
day,  with  appropriate  and  carefully  chosen  selections  in  prose  and  verse. 
The  numbers  published  include : 

Arbor  day.  Christmas,  Flag  day. 

Independence  day.    Lincoln's  birthday.  Memorial  day. 

Thanksgiving  day.  Washington's  birthday.     Easter. 

Mother's  day. 
r808.8 

U.  S.  Congress.     Official  congressional  directory  for  the  use  of 

the  U.  S.  Congress.  Supt.  of  Documents.         .60 

328.338 
U.  S.  Statistics  bureau.     Statistical  abstract  of  the  U.  S. 

Supt.  of  Documents.        .60 
Statistical    information    from    last    census    on    population,    finance, 
commerce,    manufactures   and   other   industries,    agricultural    and    other 
products,  immigration,  education,  etc. 
317.3 

Vizetelly,  F.  H.  Desk-book  of  errors  in  English;  including  notes 
on  colloquialisms  and  slang  to  be  avoided  in  conversation. 
(Standard  desk-book  ser.)  Funk      1.50 

r428.3 
Webster's  collegiate  dictionary.  Merriam.     buckram      6.00 

sheep       7.00 
Abridged    from   Webster's    "International    dictionary."     A    good   desk 
dictionary.     Jasper  Sipes  Co.,  Oklahoma  City,  distributors. 
r423 
Webster's  new  international  dictionary  of  the  English  language. 

Completely  revised.  Merriam.    buckram     16.00 

sheep     20.00 
The  best  one-volume  dictionary  for  general  use.     A  discount  may  be 
obtained  by  ordering  through  the  Jasper  Sipes  Co. 
r423 
Wilbur,  M.  A.    Everyday  business  for  women,   (school  ed.) 

Houghton       1.80 
A  valuable   and   easily  understood   explanation   of  business   methods. 
The  proper  drawing  of  a  check,  bank  deposits,   notes,  protests,  getting 
money  in  emergencies,  contracts,  bill  and  receipts,  etc. 
658 

World  almanac.     New  York  World,     (annual)  .50 

Invaluable    for    recent    statistics,    election    returns,    laws    and    other 
political  information.     Specially  good  for  the  United  States,  but  includes 
foreign  material  also.    Accurate. — ^A.  L.  A. 
r317.3 


SOME  BOOKS  ON  VOCATIONAL.  GUIDANCE  AND  EDUCATION  79 
SOME  BOOKS  ON  VOCATIONAL  GUIDANCE. 

Bloomfield,  Meyer.    Vocational  guidance  of  youth.  Houghton       1.20 

A    survey    of    the   work   being    done    in    Boston    and   suggestions    for 
organizing  it  elsewhere,  by  the  director  of  the  Vocation  Bureau. 
374 

Davenport,  Eugene.    Education  for  efficiency.  Heath       1.40 

A  forceful  statement  of  the  relation  that  should  exist  between  the 
modern  school  and  the  demands  of  modem  life,  with  practical  suggestions 
for    introducing    agricultural    courses    into    high    and    normal    schools. 

—A.  L.  A. 
371.42 

Davis,  J.  B.     Vocational  guidance.     Published  by  the  author.  Free 

Deals  especially  with  the  work  in  high  schools,  with  forms  used  in 
the  Grand  Rapids,  (Mich.)  high  schools.  Obtainable  from  the  author. 
'371.42 

Drysdale,  William.    Helps  for  ambitious  girls.  Crowell       1.50- 

Advice  to  girls   concerning   the   various  employments  and   professions 
open  to  them  and  the  possibilities  of  each. — Pittsburgh. 
396.5 

Eliot,  C.  W.     Education  for  efficiency,  and  The  new  definition  of 

the  cultivated  man.  Houghton        .8^ 

Two   essays  the  first  showing  the  need   for   education   for  efficiency  , 

the  second  defining  the  present  ideal  of  a  cultivated  man. 
378.01 

Hall,  S.  R.    How  to  get  a  position  and  how  to  keep  it.  Funk      1.00 

Practical   advice   on   choice   of   an   occupation,   with   special   hints   to 
applicants  for  various  classes  of  positions. 
374 

McKeever,  W.  A.    Training  the  boy.  Macmillan      ^.76 

Discusses  industrial  training,  social  training,  habit  training,  vocational 
training,  service  training.     Helpful  to   all  in  any  way   engaged  in   the 
guidance  of  children. 
371 

Weaver,  E.  W.    Choosing  a  career.  Y.  M.  C.  A.  press         .20 

374 

Weeks,  R.  M.    People's  school.  Houghton      1.2ft 

Emphasizes    trade    schools    to    the    end    that   we    may    evolve    a    real 
"people's  school." 
374 

SOME  BOOKS  ON  EDUCATION. 

Bailey,  C.  S.    For  the  story  teller.  Bradley       2.00 

With  a  very  helpful  list  of  story  sources  at  the  end  of  each  chapter. 
372.214 

Bailey,  C.  S.     Tell  me  another  story.  Bradley      Z.Oe 

Story  hour  programs.     Themes  of  the  stories :  Christmas,  birds,  fairies, 
myths,  the  home,  wild  life,   etc.  are  all  such  as  appeal  to  children. 
372.214 
Betts,   G.    H.     Recitation.      (Riverside   educational   monographs.) 

Houghton      1.20 
Brief  and  very  practical  discussion  of  the  purposes  and  methods  of 
the  recitation.    A  simple,  flexible  and  even  informal  treatment  of  a  sub- 
ject usually  presented  more  or  less  technically. — A.  L,  A. 
371.32 
Bryant,  S.  C.    How  to  tell  stories  to  children.  Houghton       1.50 

Discussion  of  purpose,  advantage  and  art  of  story  telling,  followed  by 
a    selection    of    graded   stories   and    list    of    books   contahilng   available 
material.— N.  Y. 
372.214 
Bryant,  S.  C.    Stories  to  tell  to  children.  Houghton       1.50 

Fifty-one  stories  with  some  suggestions  for  telling — Wisconsin. 
372.214 


80  SOME   BOOKS    ON   EDUCATION 

Colvin,  S.  S.,  and  Bagley,  W.  C.    Human  behavior,  a  first  book  in 

psychology  for  teachers.  Macmillan      1.60 

Presentation  of  the  elementary  facts  of  educational  psychology  in  short, 
clear  chapters,  easily  within  the  comprehension  of  the  ordinary  young 
teacher  for  whom  they  are  designed. — ^A.  L.  A. 
136 

Dinsmore,  J.  W.     Teaching  a  district  school;   a  book  for  young 

teachers.  Amer.  Bk.      1.28 

Detailed  advice  assuming  very  crude  conditions,  but  earnest  in  spirit 
and  full  of  practical  and  helpful  suggestions. — A.  L.  A. 
371.1 

Field,  W.  T.     Finger  posts  to  children's  reading.  McClurg       1.25 

Contains  excellent  suggestions  in  such  chapters  as:  The  influence  of 
the  home,  Reading  in  the  home.  Beading  in  the  school,  etc. — ^Wisconsin. 
028.5 

Freeman,   F.  N.     Psychology  of  the  common  branches.     (River- 
side textbooks  in  education.)  Houghton      2.00 
375.4 

Hartwell,    E.    C.     Teaching    of   history.      (Riverside    educational 

monographs.)  Houghton        .80 

The   details   of   effective   teaching   technique.     Emphasizes   the   social 
value  of  historical  study. — A.  L.  A. 
375.9 

Hinsdale,  B.  A.     How  to  study  and  teach  history.  Appleton       2.00 

The  author  was  a  clear  thinker  and  practical   school  man,   head  of 
the  pedagogical  department  of  the  University  of  Michigan.     The  book 
not  only  gives  methods,  but  splendid  bibliographies. — ^A.  L.  A. 
375.9 

Holton,  M.  A.,  and  Kimball,  Eugenia.    Games,  seatwork  and  sense 

training  exercises.  Flanagan        .60 

Compact   little  manual  for  the  teacher's   use,   with  games   and  drills 
based  on  the  ordinary  school  subjects,  planned  with  the   rural   school 
in  mind. 
372.2 

Lei  per,  M.  A.  Teaching  language  through  agriculture  and  do- 
mestic science.  (U.  S.  Bur.  of  Education,  Bull.  No.  18.) 
Supt.  of  Docmnents.  paper        .06 

Intended  as  a  practical  aid  to  the  country  school  teacher  in  adapting 
every-day  rural  life  subjects  to  oral  and  written  composition  work. 
4«7 

Lyman,  Edna.    Story  telling:  what  to  tell  and  how  to  tell  it. 

McClurg       1.25 
Definite    suggestions    for    programs    and    use    of    the    epic    tales    and 
selected  lists  of  stories. 
372.214 

JVIacClintock,   P.   L.     Literature  in  the  elementary  schools.  Uni- 
versity of  Chicago  press.    (Purchase  through  Baker  &  Taylor 
I  Co.,  354  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York  City.)  1.65 

Discusses    educational   value    of   literature   and   applies    principles    of 
selection  to  folk  tales,  myths,  stories,  poetry,  drama,  etc. 
028.5 
IMcMurray,  C.  A.     Special  method   in  reading  in  the  grades. 

Macmillan       1.32 
Includes  lists  of  books  for  grades  and  books  for  teachers. — Wisconsin. 
372.4 
IVIoMurray,  F.  M.     How  to  study  and  teaching  how  to  study. 

Houghton       1.90 
Valuable  to  teachers  of  all  grades. — ^A.   L.   A. 
371.3 
Sargent,    Walter.     Fine   and    industrial    arts    in    the    elementary 

schools.  Ginn       1.48 

A  practical  little  book  written  with  good  taste  and  judgment.     Many 
illustrations. 
372.5 


FINE  ILLUSTRATED  EDITIONS  OF  CHILDREN'S  BOOKS       81 

Smith,  A.  T.    Montessori  system  of  education.     (U.  S.  Bureau  of 

^ucation.      Bull.  No.  17.)     Supt.  of  Documents.  paper        .05 

A  clear,  concise  account,  extensive  enough  to  serve  the  small  library 
in  place  of  Dr.   Montessorl's  own  book. — A.   L.   A. 
371.4 

Swift,  W.  B.    Speech  defects  in  school  children  and  how  to  treat 

them.  Houghton      1.20 

371.94 
Thorndike,    E.    L.     Principles  of  teaching  ba^ed   on   psychology. 
(A.  G.  Seller,  1224  Amsterdam  Ave.,  New  York  City.) 

Applying  the  principles  of  psychology  to  concrete  teaching  problems, 
bibliographies.      Highly    recommended    by    educational    authorities. 
Weeks,  A.  D.    Education  of  tomorrow.  Macmillan      l.«0 

Valuable  for  its  concrete  suggestions. 
370.7 

FINE  ILLUSTRATED  EDITIONS  OF  CHILDREN'S  BOOKS. 

Aesop's  fables;   illus.  by  Arthur  Rackham.  Doubleday      3.50 

398.91 
Alcott,  L.  M.    Little  women;  illus.  by  Jessie  Wilcox  Smith.    Little      3.00 
A  beautiful  edition. 
Fiction 
Andersen,  H.  C.    Fairy  tales;  illus.  by  D.  L.  Walker.      Doubleday      3.50. 

Fiction 
Arabian  nights;  ed.  by  Kate  Douglas  Wiggin  and  Nora  A.  Smith; 

illus.  by  Maxfield  Parrish.  Scribner       3.50- 

A   selection   of   twelve    stories.   Including   the   best   known   and   a   few 
of  the  less  familiar,  but  equally  fascinatin#  tales. — ^Wisconsin. 

Contains  some  of  the  most  beautiful  of  Maxfleld  Parrish's  distinctive 
paintings. 
398.4 
Boutet  de  Monvel,  M.    Joan  of  Arc.  McKay      1.50 

Illustrations  with  simple  form  but  of  delicate  beauty  of  coloring  and 
spiritual  significance. 

Jo.92  t 

Browning,  Robert.    Pied  Piper  of  Hamelin;  illus.  by  Hope  Dunlap. 

Rand       1.50 
821 
Canton,  William.     Child's  book  of  warriors.  Dutton      2.50 

Illustrated   in   color   and   black   and   white   by   Herbert   Cole.     Tells 
of  warriors,  saints  and  kings  of  former  times. 
398.2 
Carroll,   Lewis,   pseud.     Alice's  adventures  in  wonderland;    illus. 

by  Arthur  Rackham.  Doubleday      3.50 

Both    Rackham    and    Lewis    Carroll    have    created    fairylands    which 
delight  the  children. 
Fiction 
Defoe,  Daniel.     Robinson  Crusoe;   illus.  by  the  Rhead  brothers. 

Harper       1.75 
A   fine   edition   with   attractive    illustrations,    but   contains   only   the 
first  part  of  "Robinson  Crusoe."— Pittsburgh. 
Fiction 

Robinson  Crusoe;  illus.  by  N.  C.  Wyeth. 

Cosmopolitan      3.50 

Fiction 
Doming,  Mrs.  T.  O.    American  animal  life.  Stokes      2.75 

Picture  book  of  animals  with  brief  descriptions. 

59L5 
Doming,  Mrs.  T.  O.    Animal  folk  of  wood  and  plain;  illus.  in  colors 

and  black  and  white  by  Edwin  W.  Deming.  Stokes      1.75 

591.5 


82      FINE  ILLUSTRATED  EDITIONS  ON  CHILDREN'S  BOOKS 

Doming,    Mrs.   T.    O.     Four-footed   wilderness    people;    illus.    by 
Edwin  W.  Deming.  Stokes 

591.5 

Dutton's  children's  classics.  Dutton.    ea. 

rinely   illustrated   edition,   with   decorative   covers,   heavy   paper   and 
gilt  edges.     Many  of  the  pictures  are  in  color.     The  following  titles  are 
in  print: 
Bible  stories  221 

Defoe.    Robinson  Crusoe.  Fiction 

Marryat.     Masterman  Ready.  Fiction 

Mother  Goose  tales.  398.4 

Old  Mother  Goose  rhymes;  illus.  by  Hardy.  398.8 

Dodge,   M.  M.    Hans  Brinker;   illus.  by  Maginel  Wright  Enright. 

McKay 
Brightly  colored,   poster  style  pictures,   setting  forth   Dutch   fashions 
and  landscapes  very  beautifully.     The  story  is  always  a  favorite. 
Fiction 

Field,   Eugene.     Poems  of  childhood;    illus.   by  Maxfield  Parrish. 

Scribner 
811 

France,  Anatole.     Honey  bee.  Lane 

A  fanciful  modem  fairy  tale,   chiefly  valuable  for   the  illustrations. 
Fiction 

Grimm,  J.  L.  K.,  and  W.  K.    Grimm's  fairy  tales;  illus.  by  Louis 

Rhead.  Harper 

398.4 
Hawthorne,     Nathaniel.     Tanglewood     tales;     illus.     by     W.     G. 

Edwards.  Houghton 

292 

Havs^horne,    Nathaniel.     Wonder   book;    illus.   by  Walter  Crane. 

Houghton 
292f 

Lamb,  Charles    and    Mary.     Tales   from    Shakespeare;    illus.    by 
Norman  Price.  Scribner 

822.33 

Le  Main,  H.  W.,  illus.    Little  people.  McKay 

Counting  cover  and  title-page,  there  are  seventeen  pictures  of  chil- 
dren by  H.  W.  LeMair,  distinguished  for  their  grace  and  delicate  colors. 

—A.  L.  A. 
Fiction 

Longfellow,  H.  W.    Children's  own  Longfellow.  Houghton 

A  selection  of  the  best  of  the  poet's  poems  for  children's  reading,  with 
colored  illustrations  and  decorations. 
811 

Marshall,   H.   E.     English  literature  for  boys  and  girls,   new  ed. 

Stokes 
Very  readable  accounts  of  authors  from  Caedmon  to  Tennyson,  analysis 
of   their   chief  work   and   well-chosen   selections    adapted    to   children's 
interests. — ^A.  L.  A. 
820.9 

Marshall,  H.  E.    Island  story;  a  child's  history  of  England,   (new 

ed.)  Stokes 

A  sumptuous  book  somewhat  after  the  style  of  Dickens'  "Child's  history 

,        of   England."     Will   be   popular.      The    new   edition   has   been    brought 

down  to  date. 

942 

Masefleld,  John.     Book  of  discoveries;    illus.   by   Gordon  Brown. 

Stokes 
Two   English   boys   learn   much   about   their   country   in   ancient   and 
modem  times. 
914.2 


FINE  ILLUSTRATED  EDITIONS  ON  CHILDREN'S  BOOKS       83 

Mother    Goose.      VoUand    Mother    Goose;     illus.    by    Frederick 

Richardson.  Volland       1.35 

The   full-page   pictures    are   gay    and    unusually    beautiful.      A   most 
attractive  Mother  Goose,  with  good  binding. 

398.8 

Olcott,  F.  J.    Wonder  garden.  Houghton      3.00 

One  hundred  and  fifty  tales  of  nature  myths  of  all  nations.  Illustrated 
in  color  by  Milo  Winter. 
398.2 
Pyle,  Howard.    Book  of  pirates.  Harper      6.00 

Collected  from  the  many  books  of  this  artist-author. 
923.41 

I  Pyle,  Howard.     Merry  adventures  of  Robin  Hood.  Scribner      3.50 

Delightful  book  for  boys. 
398.22 

I R head's  illustrated  juveniles.     (New  Edition)  Harper      1.75 

Rhead's  beautiful  books  with  their  wealth  of  illustrations  in  line  and 

color  would  entice  any  child  to  read  and  love  the  best  in  child  literature. 

*Arabian  Nights.  Wyss.  Swiss  family  Robinson. 

Anderson.    Fairytales.  Rhead.    Robin  Hood. 

De  Foe.  Gulliver's  travels.  Stevenson.   Kidnapped. 

Grimm.    Fairytales.  Stevenson.    Treasure  Island. 

Lamb.  Tales  from  Shakespeare.  Swift.     Gulliver's  ttravels. 

Hughes.     Tom   Brown's    school  days. 
Smith,  N.  G.  Royde-.    Una  and  the  Red  Cross  knight,  and  other 

tales  from  Spenser's  "Faerie  Queene."  Dutton      3.00 

821 
Spyri,  Johannes.    Heidi;  illus.  by  Maginel  Wright  Enright.  Rand      2.00 

Fiction 
Steel,  Mrs.  F.  A.  W.    English  fairy  tales  retold;   illus.  by  Arthur 

Rackham.  Macmillan       4.00 

Sixteen  plates  in  color  and  many  black  and  white  illustrations. 

398.4 

Stevenson,  R.  L.     Child's  garden  of  verses;   illus.  by  Ruth  Mary 

Hallock.  Rand      1.50 

Will  delight  both  children  and  grown-ups. 
821 

Stevenson,  R.  L.    Child's  garden  of  verses;  illus.  by  Jessie  Willcox 

Smith.  Scribner      3.50 

821 
Stevenson,  R.  L.     Kidnapped;   illus.  by  N.  C.  Wyeth.       Scribner      3.50 

Fiction 
Stevenson,  R.  L.    Treasure  island;  illus.  by  N.  C.  Wyeth.  Scribner      3.50 
Welcome  additions  to  the  children's  shelf  of  fine  Illustrated  volumes, 

uniform  with  the  Maxfleld  Parrish  edition  of  "Arabian  nights"  and  the 

Jessie  Willcox  Smith  edition  of  "Child's  garden  of  verses."— A.  L.  A. 

JFiction 
Tappan,  E.  M.    When  knights  were  bold.  Houghton      3.00 

Spirited,  Interesting  account  of  chivalry  and  the  details  of  mediaeval 

life  in  town  and  country. — A.  L.  A. 

940.1 
Twain,  Mark,  pseud.     Prince  and  the  pauper;    illus.  by  Franklin 

Booth,     (holiday  ed.)  Harper      2.50 

Fiction 
Windermere  series.  Rand       2.00 

Beautiful    and    reasonably    priced    edition.      Colored    plates    by    Milo 

Winter  and  Hope  Dunlap,  large  type.     Among  classics  included  are: 

Carroll.      Alice    in    Wonderland    and    through    the    Looking 
glass.  Fiction 

♦Hawthorne.    Tanglewood  tales.     Scott.     Ivanhoe. 

♦Hawthorne.    Wonder  book.  Spyri.     Heidi. 


IP 


Author  and  Title  Index 


A  B  C  of  electricity.     Meadowcroft,     17 
Aanrud,  H.    Lisbeth  Longfrock.     42 
A.b,  the  cave-man.     Waterloo.     27 
Abbott,  Jacob.     Boy  on  a  farm.     42 
Abbott,  Jane.     Larkspiir.     42 
^bout  animals.     St.  Nicholas.     23 
Aibout  the  weather.     Harrington.     17 
Adams,  E.  C,  and  Foster,  W.  D.    Heroines 

of  modern  progress.     62 
Adams,  J.  D.    Carpentry  for  beginners.     29 

When  mother  lets  us  carpenter.     29 

Adams,  J.  H.     Harper's  electricity  book  for 

boys.     17 

Harper's  indoor  book  for  boys.     29 

Harper's   machinery   book   for   boys. 


Harper's  outdoor  book  for  boys.     31 

^Adelborg,  0.     Clean  Peter  and  the  children 

of  Grubbylea.     1 
[idventittes  of  a  brownie.     Mulock.     11 
i  Adventures  of  Billy  Topsail.     Duncan.     46 
Adventures  of  Huckleberry  Finn.    Twain.  54 
Adventures  of  Pinnochio.     Collodi.     9 
Adventures  of  Tom  Sawyer.     Twain.     55 
Adventures  of  Ulysses.     Lamb.     7 
Aeneid.    Aeneid  for  boys  and  girls.    Church. 

i  6 

1^ Story  of  the  Aeneid.     Brooks.     6 

(Aeneid  for  boys  and  girls.     Chiurch.     6 
f^esop.     Aesop  for  children.     Winter.     8 

Aesop's  fables.     80,  8 

Aesop's  fables  in  words  of  one  syll- 

able.     Godolphin.     8 

Child's  version  of  Aesop.     8 

Hundred  fables.     L'Estrange.     8 

Aesop  for  children.     Winter.     8 


Aladdin  and  the  wonderful  lamp.    Lang.    10 
Alcott,  L.  M.     Eight  cousins.     42 
Jack  and  Jill.     42 

Jo's  boys.     42 

Little  men.     42 

Little  women.     42,  81 

Louisa  May  Alcott  reader.     35 

Lulu's  library.     42 

Old-fashioned  girl.     42 

Under  the  lilacs.     42 

Louisa  May  Alcott.     67 

Aldrich,    T.    B.     Marjorie   Daw,   and   other 
stories.     42 

Story  of  a  bad  boy.    42 

Alice's  adventures  in  wonderland.     Carroll. 

9,  81 
Alice's     adventures     in     wonderland,     and 

Through      the       looking      glass. 

Carroll.     9 
Alice's  visit  to  the  Hawaiian  islands.  Erout. 

58 
All  the  year  roimd.     Strong.     16 
Allen,    N.    B.      Industrial    studies:    United 

States.     27 
Amateur  circus  Ufe.     Balch.     31 
Amateur  mechanic.     Collins.     29 
American  animal  life.    Deming.     81 
American  book  of  golden  deeds.     Baldwin. 


American 
American 

American 
American 
American 
American 


Aesop's  fables.     8,  81  i 

Aesop's    fables    in    words    of    one    syllable.  I  American 

Godolphin.     8  | 

African  adventure   stories.     Loring.     23  American 


boy  at  Henley.     Channon.     44 
Boy    Scout    manual    of    military 
drill.     32 

boy's  engineering  book.    Bond.    2? 
hero  stories.     Tappan.     67 
heroes  and  heroism.     Mowry.    65 
history  for  little  folks.     Blalsdell 
and  Ball.     70 

history    in    literature.      Lane    and 
Hill.     77 
leaders  and  heroes.     Gordy.     63 


86 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


American  men  of  action.     Stevenson.     66 
American  natural  history.     Hornaday.     21 
American  pioneers.    Mowry.     65 
Americans   by    adoption.      Husband.      64 
Ames,  J.  H.    Mystery  of  Ram  Island.    42 
Ancient  man.    Van  Loon.     27 
Andersen,  H.  C.    Fairy  tales.     8,  81 

Stories  and  tales.     8 

Child's     story     of    Hans     Christian 

Anderson.     67 
Andrews,  J.    Each  and  all.    56 

Seven  little  sisters.     56 

Stories  mother  nature  told  her  chil- 

dren.    15 

Stories  of  my  four  friends.     15 

Ten  boys  who  lived  on  the  road  from 

long  ago  to  now.     62 
Animal    fables    from    the    dark    continent. 

Stafford.     8 
Animal  folk  of  wood  and  plain.    Deming.    81 
Animal  folk  tales.     Stanley.     13 
Animal  secrets  told.     Brearley.     20 
Animal  story  book.     Lang.     22 
Animals  at  home.     Bartlett.     22 
Animals :    their    relation    and   use   to   man. 

Wood.     22 
Anita.     Cobb.      44 
Another  fairy  reader.     Baldwin.     9 
Antin,  M.    At  school  in  the  promised  land. 

67 

Promised  land.     68 

Appleton's  New  practical  encyclopaedia.  77 
Approved      selections      for      reading      and 

memorizing.     Hix.     39 
Arabian  nights.     9,  81 
Arkansas  bear.     Paine.     51 
Around    the     world     geographical    readers. 

Carroll.      57 
Around    the    world    in    the    sloop    Spray. 

Slocxmi.     61 
Around     the     world     with     the     children. 

Carpenter.     57 
Art  and  life  primer.     Jacobs.     2 
Art  crafts  for  beginners.     Sanford.     31 
Art-literaturo  readers.     Grover.     2 
Art-music   readers.      Ripley   and    Schneider. 

35 
Asgard  stories.     Poster  and  Cummings.     7 
Ashmun,  M.  E.     Isabel  Carleton's  year.     42 

Stephen's  last  chance.     42 

Astronomy  velth  the  naked  eye.  Servlss.  17 
At  school  in  the  promised  land.  Antin.  67 
At  the  butterfly  house.     Brown.     43 

At  war  with  Pontiac.    Munroe.     50 

Aimt  Martha's  comer  cupboard.    Kirby.     28 

Austin,   M.     Trail  book.     26 

Austin,  0.  P.    Uncle  Sam's  secrets    13 

Uncle  Sam's  soldiers.     13 

Ayrton,  IVIrs.  M.  C.  Child  life  in  Japan.  56 
Aztec  hunters.     Rolt-Wheeler.     26 


Aztec  treasure  house.     Janvier.     48 

Babbitt,  E.  C.     Jataka  tales.     7 

Babson,   R.  W.     Central  American  journey. 

57 
Babyhood  of  wild  animals.     McNally.     21 
Bacliman,  F.  P.     Great  inventors  and  their 

inventions.     62 
Bacon,  A.  IVI.    Japanese  girls  and  women.   57 
Bacon,  IVI.  8.  H.     Pictures  that  every  child 

should  know.     34 

Songs  that  every  child  should  know. 

34 
Bailey,   C.   S.     Boys  and  girls  of  colonial 
days.     70 

For  the  story  teller.     79 

Hero  stories.     62 

Tell  me  another  story.     79 

Bailey,   C.   S.,   and   Lewis,   C.   M.     For  the 

children's  hour.     35 
Bailey,  L.  H.    First  lessons  with  plants.     18 
Baker,     E.     K.      Children's    first    book    of 

poetry.     38 

Children's  second  book  of  poetry.    38 

Children's  third  book  of  poetry.     38 

Balch,   E.   B.     Amateur  circus  life.     31 
Baldwin,  J.    Abraham  Lincoln.     69 

American  book  of  golden  deeds.     62 

Another  fairy  reader.     9 

Fairy  reader.     9 

Fairy  stories  and  fables.     9 

Fifty  famous  people.     62 

Fifty  famous  rides  and  riders.     74 

Fifty  famous  stories  retold.     74 

Four  great  Americans.     62 

Golden  fleece.    6 

Hero  tales  told  In  school.     12 

Nine  choice  poems.     38 

Old  Greek  stories.     6 

Thirty   more   famous    stories    retold 

75 

Wonder  book  of  horses.     9 

Baldy  of  Nome.     Darling.     22 
Ball,  Sir.  R.  S.    Star-land.    16 
Banbury  Cross  stories.     Howard.     2 
Bankside  costimie  book  for  children.     Stone 

41 
Bannerman,  H.    Story  of  little  black  Samb( 

1 
Barbara's  heritage.     Hoyt.     48 
Barbarian  and  noble.    Lansing.     64 
Barbour,  R.  H.     Half-back.     42 
Barnaby,   Lee.     Bennett.     43 
Barnes,  J.     Hero  of  Lake  Erie.     69 
Barrie,  J.  M.     Peter  Pan.     9 
Bartlett,  J.    Familiar  quotations.     77 
Bartlett,  L.  L.    Animals  at  home.     22 
Baskett,  J.  N.     Story  of  fishes.     20 
Bassett,  S,  W.     Story  of  cotton.     27 

Story  of  glass.     27 

Story  of  gold  and  silver.     27 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


87 


story  of  iron.     27 

Story  of  leather.     27 

Story  of  lumber.     27 

Story  of  porcelain.     27 

Story  of  silk.     27 

Story  of  sugar.     27 

Story  of  wool.     27 

Bayliss,  C  K.    Lolami.    26 

Lolimi  in  Tusayan.     26 

Treasury  of  Indian  tales.     72 

Baylor,  E.  M.  H.    Little  prospector.     42 
Baylor,  F.  C.     Juan  and  Juanita.     42 
Baynes,  E.  H.     Wild  bird  guests.     24 
Bear  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     23 
Beard,  D  C.     Boy  pioneers,  sons  of  Daniel 
Boone.     31 

Field  and  forest  handy  book.     32 

Jack  of  all  trades.     29 

Shelters,  shacks  and  shanties.     32 

Beard,   E.  P.     Jolly  book  of  fun  craft.     32 
Beard,    L.,   and   A.   B.     Little  folks'  handy 

book.     29 
Beautiful  Joe.     Saunders.     23 
Beebe,  J.    Four  American  naval  heroes.     62 
Bemister,  M.     Indian  legends.     72 
Ben-Hur.     Wallace.     55 
Bennett,  J.    Bamaby  Lee.    43 

Master  Skylark.     43 

Benson,   E.   F.     David  Blaize  and  the  blue 

door.     43 
Bertelli,   L.     Prince  and  his  ants.     25 
Betts,  G.   ri.     Recitation.     79 
Betty  Leicester.     Jewett.     48 
Betty  Leicester's   Christmas.     Jewett.     48 
Bible.    Bible  for  young  people.     4 
Bible    stories.    New    Testament    and 

Old  Testament.     Moulton.     5 

Bible     stories     to     read     and     tell. 

Olcott.     5 

■ Modem   reader's   Bible   for   schools: 

the  New  Testament.     5 

Old,  old  story  book.     Tappan.     5 

Stories  for  the  Bible  hour.    Johnson, 

5 

Truly  stories  from  the  surely  Bible. 

Howard.     5 
Bible  for  young  people,     5 
Bible  stories.     5 

Bible  stories,  New  Testament  and  Old  Testa- 
ment.   Moulton,     5 
Bible  stories  to  read  and  tell.     Olcott.     5 
Big  people  and  little  people  of  other  lands. 

Shaw.    61 
BIgham,    M.   A.     Fanciful  flower  tales.      9 

Merry  animal  tales,     9 

Billy,  the  boy  naturaUst.    Murrlll.    51 
Billy  Topsail  and  company.     Duncan.     46 
Bimbi   stories  for  children.     LaRamee.     49 
Biography  of  a  grizzly.     Seton.     24 
Bidgraphy  of  a  silver  fox.     Seton,     24 


I  Bird  book.     Eckstorm.     25 
Bird  friends.     Trafton.     25 
Bird  houses  boys  can  build.     Slepert     31 
Bird  stories  from  Burroughs,    Burroughs,   24 
Birds    and    bees.      Sharp    Eyes    and    other 

papers.    Burroughs.     25 
Birds'  Christmas  Carol.     Wiggin.     56,  41 
Birds'  Christmas  Carol   (play).     Wiggin,    41 
Birds  through  the  year,     Gilmore,     25 
Birds  worth  knowing.     Blanchan.     24 
Bishop,  F.     Panama,  past  and  present.     70 
Blackboard's  island.     Holland.     48 
Blackmore,  R.  D.    Loma  Doone.    43 
Blaisdell,  A.  F.,  and  Ball,  F.  K.    American 

history  for  little  folks.     70 

English  history  story  book.     74 

Hero  stories  from  American  history. 

70 
Pioneers  of  America.     62 

Short  stories  from  American  history. 

70 
Blaisdell,  M.  F.    Boy  Blue  and  his  friends. 
1 

Cherry  tree  children,     1 

Polly  and  Dolly.     1 

Pretty  Polly  Flinders,     1 

Tommy  Tinker's  book,     1 

Blanchan,  N.     Birds  worth  knowing.     24 
Bloomfield,     M.      Vocational    guidance    of 

youth.     79 

Blossom  hosts  and  insect  guests.     Gibson.  19 

Blue  aimt.     White,     55 

Blue  bird  for  children.     Maeterlinck. 

Blue  fairy  book,     Lang.     10 

Boardman,    M.    T.      Under    the    Red 
flag  at  home  and  abroad. 

Bob,  son  of  battle.    Olllvant.    23 

Bok,  E.    Dutch  boy  fifty  years  after.     68 

Bolton,  S.  K.     Lives  of  poor  boys  who  be- 
came  famous.      62 

Bond.    A.    R.      American   boy's   engineering 
book.     27 

Inventions  of  the  great  war,     27 

Scientific  American  boy,     32 

Scientific  American  boy  at  school.  27 

With  the  men  who  do  things,     27 

Bond,  C.  J.     Tales  of  little  cats.     1 

Book  of  ballad  stories,     Macleod.     12 

Book  of  bravery.     Lanier.     64 

Book  of  cats  and  dogs.     .lohonnot.     22 

Book  of  discoTeries.     Masefleld.     82 

Book  of  fables.     Scudder,     8 

Book  of  fables  and  folk  stories.     Scudder. 

13 
Book  of  famous  verse.     Repplier.     40 
Book  of  games.     White,     33 
Book  of  King  Arthur  and  his  noble  knights. 

Macleod.     12 
Book  of  legends.    Scudder.     13 
Book  of  magic,     Collins,     32 


10 


Cross 
13 


88 


AUTHOR   AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Book    of    nature    stories    to    tell    children. 

Seers.      24 
Book  of  nursery  rhymes.     Mother  Goose.     3 
Book  of  pirates.     Pyle.     83 
Book  of  plays  for   little   actors.     Johnston 

and  Bamum.     39 
Book  of  the  happy  warrior.     Newbolt.     75 
Book  of  the  long  trail.     Newbolt.     65 
Book  of  verses  for  children.     Lucas.     39 
Book  of  wonder  voyages.     Jacobs.     75 
Book  of  woodcraft  and  Indian  lore.     Seton. 

33 
Border  fights  and  fighters.    Brady.    62 
Borrowed  sister.     White.     55 
Borup,  G.     Tenderfoot  with  Peary.     57 
Bostock,  F.  C.    Training  of  wild  animals.  20 
Boutet  de  Monvel,  M.    Joan  of  Arc.     81 
Bowsfield,   C.  C.     How  boys  and  girls  can 

earn  money.    29 
Bow-wow  and  Mew-mew.     Craik.     2 
Boy  Blue  and  his  friends.     Blaisdell.     1 
Boy  craftsman.     Hall.     30 
Boy  electrician.     Morgan.     17 
Boy  emigrants.     Brooks.     43 
Boy  mineral  collectors.     Kelley.     18 
Boy  officers  of  1812.     Tomlinson.     54 
Boy  on  a  farm.     Abbott.     42 
Boy  pioneers,  sons  of  Daniel  Boone.    Beard. 

31 
Boy  scout,  and  other  stories  for  boys.   Davis. 

45 
Boy  scout  book  of  stories.    Mathiews.    50 
Boy  Scouts  at  Birchbark  island.     Holland. 

48 
Boy  Scouts  life  of  Lincoln.     Tarbell.     69 
Boy    Scouts    of    America.      American    Boy 

Scout  manual  of  military  drill.  32 

Handbook  for  boys.     32 

Boy  Scouts  of  Woodcraft  camp.    Burgess.  43 

Boy  Scout's  year  book.    Mathiews.     33 

Boy  settlers.     Brooke.     43 

Boy  soldiers  of  1812.    Tomlinson.     54 

Boy  vrith  the  U.  S.  census.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy     with     the     U.     S.     explorers.      Rolt- 
Wheeler.     15 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  fisheries.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  foresters.    Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  Indians.    Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  inventors.    Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy    with    the    U.    S.    life-savers.      Rolt- 
Wheeler.    15 
Boy  with  the  U.  S.  mail.    Rolt-Wheeler.     15 
Boy  with  the  II.  S.  naturalists.  Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 


Boy  with  the  U.   S.   survey.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy  with  the  XJ.  S.  trappers.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
Boy  with  the  U.    S.   weather  man.     Rolt- 
Wheeler.     15 
Boys  and  girls'  life  of  Roosevelt.    Hagedom. 

69 
Boys  and  girls  of  colonial  days.    Bailey.    70 
Boys'  airplane  book.     Collins.     30 
Boys'  book  of  battles.    Fraser.    75 
Boys'  book  of  chemistry.     Clarke.     18 
Boys'  book  of  engine  building.     Collins.    30 
Boys'  book  of  famous  soldiers.     McSpadden. 

65 
Boys'  book  of  firemen.     Crump.     13 
Boys'  book  of  frontier  fighters.     Sabin.    72 
Boys'  book  of  Indian  warriors.     Sabin.     73 
Boys'  book  of  magic.     Carrington.     32 
Boys'  book  of  mounted  police.     Crump.     13 
Boys'  book  of  pioneers.     Wood.     67 
Boys'  book  of  pirates.     Gilbert.     63 
Boys'  book  of  sports.     Rice.     33 
Boys'  book  of  the  world  war.    Rolt-Wheeler. 

76 
Boys'  Catlin.     Catlin.     73 
Boys'  heroes.     Hale.     64 
Boys'  King  Arthur.     Lanier.     12 
Boys'  life  of  Edison,     Meadowcroft.     68 
Boys'  life  of  U.  S.  Grant.     Nicolay.     68 
Boys'  life  of  Lafayette.     Brooks.     68 
Boys'  life  of  Napoleon.     Foa.     69 
Boys'  life  of  Mark  Twain.    Paine.    69 
Boys  of  '76.     Coffin.     70 
Boys  of  '61.     Coffin.     70 
Boys'  own  book  of  great  inventions.    Darrow. 

28 
Boys'  own  guide  to  fishing.    Keene.     33 
Boys'  Parkman.     Parkman.     72 
Braddy,  N.     Young  folks'  encyclopaedia  of 

etiquette.     5 
Bradish,  S.  P.    Old  Norse  stories.     6 

Stories  of  country  life.    27 

Brady,  C.  T.    Border  fights  and  fighters.    62 
Brailliar,     F.       Knowing    Insects     through 

stories.     25 
Brearley,  H.  C.    Animal  secrets  told.    20 
Brooke,  L.  L    Golden  goose.     1 

Johnny  Crow's  garden.     1 

Three  bears.     1 

Three  little  pigs.     1 

Brooke,  N.     Boy  emigrants.     43 
Boy  settlers.     43 


Brooks,  E.    Story  of  the  Aeneid.     6 

Story  of  the  Iliad.     6 

Story  of  the  Odyssey.     6 

Story  of  Siegfried.     11 

Brooks,  E.  C.     Story  of  com  and  the  west- 
ward migration.     27 


Brooks,    E.    8.      Century 
Americans.     62 

Chivalrlc  days.     75 

Historic  girls.     62 

Master  of  the  Strong  Hearts.     43 

True  story  of  Abraham  Lincoln.     69 

True  story  of  Christopher  Columbus. 


True  story  of  George  Washington.  70 
True  story  of  Lafayette.     68 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX, 
book    of    famous 


Brown,  A.  F.    John  of  the  woods.     43 

Lonesomest  doll.     43 

Brown,  A.  F.,  and  Bell,  J.  M.    Tales  of  the 

red  children.     72 
Brown.  E.  A.     At  the  butterfly  house.     43 
Brown,  H.  D.    Her  sixteenth  year.     43 

Little  Miss  Phoebe  Gay.     43 

Brown,  J.     Rab  and  his  friends.     22 
Brown,  K.  L.    Plant  baby  and  its  friends. 

18 

Brown  wolf,  and  other  stories.    London.     49 

Brown,  Zaidee.  Directions  for  the  librarian 
of  a  small  library.    77 

Browne.  0.  L.,  and  Bailey,  C.  8.  Jingle 
primer.     1 

Browne,   F.     Wonderful  chair.     9 

Brownie  primer.     Cox.     2 

Browning,   R.     Pied  Piper  of  Hamelin.     81 

Bryant,  Mrs.  L.  M.  Famous  pictures  of 
real  animals.     20 

Bryant.  S.  C.  How  to  tell  stories  to  chil- 
dren.    79 

Stories  to  tell  to  children.     79 

Bryce,  C.  T.     Play  time  primer.     35 

Short  stories  for  little  people.     35 

That's  why  stories.     35 

Buccaneers  and  pirates  on  our  coast.  Stock- 
ton.    61 

Buckley,   E.  F.     Children  of  the  dawn.     43 
Builders  of  our  country.     Southworth.     66 
Building  of  cities.     James.     14 
Bun,  a  wild  rabbit.     Lippincott.     22 
Bunyan,  J.     Pilgrim's  progress.     5 
Burgess,  G.    Goops  and  how  to  be  them.     1 
Burgess,   T.  W.     Boy  Scouts  of  Woodcraft 
camp.     43 

Burgess  bird  book  for  children.     24 

Burgess  bird  book  for  children.  Burgess.  24 
Burnett,  F.  H.  Little  Lord  Fauntleroy.  43 
—  Little  princess.     43 

Racketty-packetty  house.     9 

Sara  Crewe.     44 

Secret  garden.     44 

Burreil,  C.  F.     Fun  of  cooking.     29 

Little  cook  book  for  a  little  girl.     29 

Little  housekeeping  book  for  a  little 

girL     29 
Burroughs,  J.    Bird  stories  from  Burroughs. 
24 


89 
and 


Burt, 


■  Birds    and    bees.    Sharp    Eyes 
other  papers.     25 
Squirrels  and  other  fur-bearers.     20 
Wit  of  a  duck.     15 
M.  E.     Little  nature  studies  for  little 

people.     15 
•  Poems  that  every  child  should  know. 


Burt.   M.  E.,  and  Ragozin,  Z.  A.    Herakles 
the  hero  of  Thebes.     6 

Odysseus,   the   hero   of   Ithaca.      G 

Burton,  A.  H.    Four  American  patriots.     62 
Buz.     Noel.     26 

Cadet  days.    King.    48 

Cady,    M.    R.,    and    Dewey,   J.    M.     Picture 

stories  from  great  artists.     34 
Caldecott's  picture  books.     1 
Call  of  the  wild.     London.     23 
Camp,  W.  C.    Football  without  a  coach.    32 
Camp  and  trail.     White.     33 
Camp  Fire  Girls.     Manual  of  activities.     32 
Canfleld.  D.  F.    What  shall  we  do  now?     32 
Canfleld,  F.  A.     Refugee  family.     44 
Canton,  W.     Child's  book  of  warriors.     81 
Captain  January.     Richards.     52 
Captains  courageous.     Kipling.     49 
Careers  of  danger  and  daring.     Moffett.     65 
Careless  Jane.    Pyl».    4 
Carpenter,  E.  J.     Hellenic  tales.     6 
Carpenter,  F.  G.    Around  the  world  with  the 

children.     57 

Foods  and  their  uses.     27 

Geographical  readers.     57 

How  the  world  is  clothed.     28 

How  the  world  is  fed.     28 

How  the  world  is  housed.     28 

Carpentry   and  mechanics  for  boys.     H»1L 

30 
Carpentry  for  beginners.     Adams.     29 
Carrington,  H.     Boys'  book  of  magic.     32 
Carroll,    L.     Alice's   adventures  In   wonder- 
land.    9,  81 

Alice's    adventures    in    wonderland, 

and  Through  the  looking  glass.    9 
Carroll,    S.    W.,    and    0.    F.      Around   the 

world  geographical  readers.     57 
Carter,   E.  H.     Christmas  candles.     38 
Cat   stories.      St.    Nicholas.      23 
Catherwood,    M.    H.     Heroes  of  the   middle 

west:  the  French.     70 
Catlln,  G.     Boy's  Catlin.     73 
Cattle-ranch   to   college.     Doubleday.      46 
Cave  boy  of  the  age  of  stone.    Mclntyre.    26 
Central   American   journey,     Babson.      57 
Century  book  of  famous  Americans.    Brooks. 

62 
Oervantes-Saavedra,  M.  de.    Don  Quixote  de 

la  Mancha.     44 
Chadwiek,    M.    L.   P.     Legends  of  the  Red 

children.     73 


90 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Puss  in  boots — Reynard  the  fox.     1 

Three  bears.     1 

Three   little  kittens— Chicken   Little. 

2 
Chamberlain,  J.  F.    How  we  are  clothed.    28 

How  we  are  fed.     28 

How  we  are  sheltered.     28 

How  we  travel.     28,  57 

Champion  of  the  foothills,     Theiss.     54 
Champlin,  J.  D.    Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of 

common  things.     77 

Young  folks'   cyclopaedia   of   litera- 

ture and  art.     77 

' Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  persons 

and  places.     77 

Champlin,  J.  D.,  and  Lucas,  F.  A.  Young 
folks'  cyclopaedia  of  natural  his- 
tory.    77 

Chance,  L.  M.  Little  folks  of  many  lands. 
57 

Chandler,  A.  C.  Magic  pictures  of  the  long 
ago.     34 

Channon,  F,  E.    American  boy  at  Henley.  44 

Chapin,  A.  A.     Story  of  the  Rhinegold.     11 

Wonder  tales  from  Wagner.     11 

Charm  of  fine  manners.    Straight.    Starrett.    6 
Chase,  A.,  and  Clow,  E.    Stories  of  industry. 

28 
Chaucer.     Stories  from  Chaucer.     Kehnan. 

36 
Chemistry  for  young  people.    Jenks.     18 
Cherry  tree  children.     Blaisdell.     1 
Child  at  play.     Murray.     3 
Child  life  In  Japan.     Ayrton.     56 
Child  life  in  other  lands.    Perdue.     60 
"Child  life  in   poetry"  and  "Child   life  in 
prose,"  Selections  from  Whittier. 
38 
Child  stories  from  the  masters.    Menefee.  36 
Childhood  of  Ji-Shib,  the  Ojibwa.    Jenks.  73 
Children  of  Odin.     Coliun.     7 
Children  of  other  lands  books.     57 
Children  of  the  dawn.     Buckley.     43 
Children  of  the  tenements.     Riis.     52 
Children  of  the  world  series.     58 
Children's  book.     Scudder.     37 
Children's  book  of  birds.     Miller.     25 
Children's  book  of  Christmas.     Dier.     36 
Children's  book  of  Christmas  stories.  Dickin- 
son and  Skinner.     36 
Children's  book  of  patriotic  stories.    Dickin- 
son.   35 
Children's  fairyland.     Olcott.     11 
Children's  first  book  of  poetry.     Baker.     38 
Children's  Homer.     Colum.     7 
Children's  hour.     Tileston.     4 
Children's  own  Longfellow.     Longfellow.   82 
Children's  plays.     Skinner.     41 
Children's  second  book  of  poetry.    Baker.  38 


Children's     stories     in     American     history. 

Wright.     72 
Children's    stories    in    American    literature. 

Wright.     38 
Children's  third  book  of  poetry.     Baker.     38 
Child's  book  of  American  biography.     Stimp- 

son.     6G 
Child's  book  of  holiday  plays.     Wickes.     41 
Child's  book  of  the  teeth.     Ferguson.     31 
Child's  book  of  warriors.       Canton.     81 
Child's    day.      Hutchinson.      31 
Child's  first  book.     Gates.     2 
Child's  garden  of  verses.     Stevenson.     83 
Child's  own  book  of  verse.    Skinner,  A.  M. 

and  Wickes,  F.  G.     41 
Child's   Robinson   Crusoe.      Nkla.      3 
Child's  story  of  Hans   Christian  Anderson. 

Harboe.      67 
Child's  version  of  Aesop.     Aesop.     8 
Chinese  fables  and  folk  stories.     Davis.     12 
Chlsholm,   L.     Golden  staircase.       38 
Choosing  a  career.    Weaver.     79 
Christmas  candles.     Carter.     38 
Christmas  carol.     Dickens.     45 
Christmas   carol,    and    The    cricket    on    the 

hearth.     Dickens.     45 
Christmas    every    day    and    other    stories. 

Howells.     48 
Chivalric  days.     Brooks.     75 
Church,  A.  J.    Aeneid  for  boys  and  girls.    6 

Iliad  for  boys  and  girls.    6 

Odyssey  for  boys  and  girls.     6 

Three  Greek  children.     44 

Yoimg  Macedonian   in  the   army   of 

Alexander.      44 
Circus  and  all  about  it.     Smith.     4 
Circus  book.     Smith.     4 
Civil  government.     Reinsch.     14 
Civil  war  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     72 
Clark,  E.  H.    Track  athletics  up  to  date.    32 
Clarke,  C.  R.    Boys'  book  of  chemistry.     18 
Clean  Peter  and  the  children  of  Grubbylea. 

Adelborg.     1 
Coal  and  the  coal  mines.     Greene.     17 
Cobb,  B.  B.    Anita.     44 
Cock,    the   mouse    and   the    little   red   hen. 

Lefevre.     2 
Codd,    M.    J.      On    board    a    United    States 

battleship.     13 
Cody,  8.    Four  American  poets.     62 

Four  famous  American   writers.      63 


Coe,    F.    E.     Founders   of   our  country.     63 

Heroes  of  everyday  life.     63 

Makers  of  the  nation.     63 

Coffin,  C.  C.    Boys  of  '76.     70 

Boys  of  '61.     7 

Cole,  N.  B.,  and  Ernest,  C.  H.    First  aid  for 

boys.     31 
Collins,  A.  F    Amateur  mechanic.     29 
Book  of  magic.     32 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Boys'  airplane  book.     30 

Boys'  book  of  engine  building.     30 

Handicraft  for  boys.     30 

Jack  Heaton,  wireless  operator.     44 

Magic  of  science.     32 

Collins,  F.  A.    Fighting  engineers.     70 

Wireless  man.     28 

Collodi,  C.     Adventures  of  Pinnochio.     9 
Colonial  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     72 
Colum,  P.     Children  of  Odin.     7 

Children's  Homer.     7 

Colvin,   S.  S.,  and   Bagiey,  W.  C.     Htiman 

behavior.     80 
Commercial  geography.     Redway.     78 
Comstock,    Mrs.    A.    B.     Ways   of  the  six- 
footed.     25 
Congressional  directory,     U.  S.  Congress.  78 
Cooking  for  little  girls.     Foster.     30 
Coolidge,  S.     Cross  Patch  and  other  stories. 
44 

Eyebright.     44 

What  Katy  did.     44 

Coombs,  L.    U.  S.  Grant.     68 
Cooper,  J.  F.     Deersiayer.     44 

Last  of  the  Mohicans.     44 

Pathfinder,     44 

Pioneers.     45 

Prairie.     45 

Corn  plants.     Sargent,     19 

Cornell.    L.    F.      Little   sewing   book   for   a 

little  girl,     30 
Cory,  F.  Y.    Little  Boy  Blue,     2 
Cotes,  Mrs.  E.     Story  of  Sonny  Sahib,     45 
Courageous  girls,     St.  Nicholas,     6& 
Cox,  P.    Brownie  primer.     2 
Craik,  G.  M.    Bow-wow  and  Mew-mew.    2 
Cram,    G.    F.     Army    and   navy    edition   of 

Cram's  quick  reference  atlas,     77 
Cram,  W.  E.    More  little  beasts  of  field  and 

wood.     20 
Crissey,   F.     Story  of  foods.     28 
Crommelin,  E.  G.    Famous  legends.    11 
Cross  Patch  and  other  stories,    Coolidge.    44 
Crownfield,  G.     Little  tailor  of  the  winding 

way.     45 
Cruikshank,   G.     Cruikshank  fairy  book.     9 
Cruise  of  the  Dazzler.     London,     50 
Crump,  I.    Boys'  book  of  firemen.     13 

Boys'  book  of  mounted  police.     14 

Cumnock,  R.  M.     School  speaker,     35 
Currier,  H.  J.    Just  for  fun.     32 

Curtis,  A.  T.    Little  maid  of  Province  town. 

45 
Cutler,  U.  W.     Stories  of  King  Arthur  and 

his  knights.     12 
Dab  Kinzer,     Stoddard,     53 
Dame  Bug  and  her  babies.    Patch.     26 
Dame  Curtsey's  book  of  games.     Glover,    32 
Dana,  Mrs.  E.  S.    How  to  know  wild  flowers. 

77 


91 

Plants  and  their  children.     18 

Dana,  R.  H.    Two  years  before  the  mast.    45 
Dandelion  cottage,     Rankin,     51 

Daring  deeds  of  great  pathfinders.     Sander- 
son.    66 
Darling,  E.  B,    Baldy  of  Nome.     22 
Darrow,    F.    L.     Boys'   own   book  of   great 

inventions,     28 
Davenport,  E.    Education  for  efficiency.     79 
David  Blalze  and  the  blue  door,     43 
Davis,    A.    C.     Nature   stories   for   youngest 

readers,     20 
Davis,  J.  B.     Vocational  guidance,     79 
Davis,    M.    H.,    and    Chow-Leung.     Chinese 

fables  and  folk  stories,     12 
Davis,   R.   H.     Boy  scout,  and  other  storlee 

for  boys.     45 
Day,  H.  F.    Eagle  Badge,     45 
Day   in   a    colonial   home,      PrescotL      72 
Days  and  deeds,     Stevenson,     41 
Deersiayer.     Cooper.     44 
Defoe,  D.    Robinson  Crusoe.    45,  81 
De  la  Mare,  W.  J.     Peacock  pie.     38 
De    La    Ramee,    Louise.     Bimbl   stories   for 
children.     49 

Dog  of  Flanders.     49 

Deland,  E.  D.    Katrina.    45 

Oakleigh.     45  •* 

Successful  venture,     45 


Deming,  E.  W.,  and  Mrs.  T.  0.    Indian  child 

life.     73 

Little  brothers  of  the  west.     73 

Deming,  N.  H.,  and  Bemis,  K.  I.    Stories  of 

patriotism.     70 
Deming,   Mrs.  T.  0.     American  animal  life. 

81 

Animal  folk  of  wood  and  plain.     81 

Four-footed  wilderness  people.     82 

DeMusset,    P.    E.     Mr.    Wind  and  Madame 

Rain,     10 
Desk  book  of  errors  in  English.     Vizetelly. 

78 
Dewey,  J.  M.     Lessons  on  manners.     5 
Dickens,  C.    Christmas  carol.     45 

Christmas  carol,  and  The  cricket  on 

the  hearth.     45 

Dickens  reader.     35 

Story  of  little  Nell.     45 

•  Twelve  Christmas  stories,    46 

Dickinson,    A.    D.,    and    H.   W.      Children's 

book  of  patriotic  stories.     35 

Second  book  of  patriotic  stories.    36 

Dickinson,  A.  D.,  and  Skinner,  A.  M.    Chil- 
dren's book  of  Christmas  stories. 
36 
Dier,  J.  C.    Children's  book  of  Christmas.  36 
Dinsmore,  J.  W.    Teaching  a  district  school. 

80 
Dhrectlons    for    the    librarian    of    a    small 
library.      Brown.     77 


92 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Discoverers  and  explorers.     Shaw.     66 
Dix,  B.  M.     Little  captive  lad.     46 
Merrylips.     46 

Soldier  Rigdale.     46 

Dodge,  M.  M.    Donald  and  Dorothy.     46 

Hans  Brinker.     46,  82 

Land  of  pluck.     46 

Rhymes   and  jingles.     38 

When  life  is  young.     38 

Dog  of  Flanders.     LaRamee.     49 
Dole,  C.  F.     Young  citizen.     14 
Dolls  of  many  lands.     Wade.     33 

Don    Quixote    de    la    Mancha.      Cervantes - 

Saavedra.     44 
Donald  and  Dorothy.     Dodge.     46 
Dopp,  K.  E.    Early  cave-men.     26 

Early  sea  people.     26 

Later  cave-men.     26 

Tree-dwellers.     26 

Doubleday,  R.     Cattle-ranch  to  college.     46 
Oownes,  A.  M.    Fire  fighters  and  th«ir  pets. 

14 
Doyle,  C.    Sherlock  HoUnes.     46 
Drake,   F.     Indian  history  for  yoimg  folks. 

73 
Drake,  S.  A.     On  Plymouth  rock.     71 
Dramatic    stories    for    reading    and    acting. 

Skinner.     40 
Orysdale,  W.    Helps  for  ambitious  girls.     79 
Ou   Chaillu,   P.   B.     In  African  forest  and 

jungle.     22 

Wild  life  under  the  equator.     22 

Dudley,  A.  T.    Following  the  ball.     46 
Duncan,  F.    Mary's  garden  and  how  it  grew. 


Eastman,  C.  A.    Indian  boyhood.     73 

Indian  heroes  and  great  chieftians. 

73 

Indian  scout  talks.     32 


When  mother  lets  us  garden.     20 


Duncan,  N.    Adventures  of  Billy  Topsail.  46 

Billy  Topsail  and  company.     46 

Dunn,  F.  W.    What  shall  we  play?     38 
OuPuy,  W.  W.    Uncle  Sam,  detective.    14 

Uncle   Sam,  wonder-worker.      14 

Uncle   Sam's   modern   miracles.      14 

Dutch  boy  fifty  years  after.     Bok.     68 
Dutch   twins.      Perkins.      51 
Dutch   twins   primer.     Perkins.      51,    60 
<Dutton,  M.  B.     Little  stories  of  France.     75 

Little  stories  of  Germany.     75 

(Dutton's   Children's  classics.     82 

Dyer,  W.  A.     Sons  of  liberty.     46 

Sach  and  all.     Andrews.     56 

Eagle  Badge.     Day.     45 

Earle,  Mrs.  A.    Home  life  In  colonial  days. 

71 
Early  cave-men.     Dopp.     26 
Early  sea-people.     Dopp.     26 
Earning  her  way  to  college.     Johnson.     48 
Earth  and  sky.    Holden.     16 
Earth    and   sky    every    child    should    know. 

Rogers.     18 
East    o'    the    sun    and    west   o'    the    moon. 

Thome-Thomsen.    13 


Eastman,   E.  G.     Indian  legends  retold.     73 
Eaton,  W.  P.    On  the  edge  of  the  wilderness. 

22 
Eckstorm,  F.  H.    Bird  book.     25 
Education  for  efficiency.    Davenport,     79 
Education  for  efficiency,     Eliot.     79 
Education  of  tomorrow.     Weeks.     81 
Eggleston,  E.     First  book  in  American  his- 
tory.    71 

Hoosier  school-boy.     46 

Household     history     of     the     United 

States.     71 

Stories  of  American  life  and  adven- 

ture.    71 

Stories  of  great  Americans  for  little 

Americans.     63 
Eight  cousins.     Alcott.     42 
Electric  toy  making  for  amateurs.    Sloane, 

17 
Elementary  history  of  our  country.     Tappan, 

72 
Elementary  woodwork,     Kilbon.     30 
Elementary   woodworking,     Foster.     30 
Elephant   stories.      St.    Nicholas.      23 
Eliot,  G.     Mill  on  the  floss,     46 
Eliot,  C.  W.     Education  for  efficiency,     79 
Elizabeth  Bess.     Scott.     52 
Ellis,  E.  S.    Lives  of  the  presidents.     63 
Emergencies.     Gulick.     31 
English  fairy  tales  retold.     Steel,     83, 
English  history   story   book.     Blaisdell  and 

Ball.      74. 
English     literature     for     boys     and     girJs. 

Marshall.     82 
Eskimo  stories.     Smith.     61 
Evangeline.     Longfellow.     39 
Evangeline,     Snowbound,     etc.       Longfellow 

and  others.     39 
Evans,   F.   E.,  and  Jackson,  0.   P.     Marvel 

book  of  American  ships.     14 
Everychild's  Mother  Goose.     Mother  Goose. 

3 
Everyday  business  for  women.     Wilbur.     78 
Everyday  heroes.     St.   Nicholas.     66 
Everyday   life   in   the   colonies.     Stone   and 

Fickett.     72 
Ewing,  J.  H.  Jackanapes.     46 
Explorers  and  founders  of  America.     Foote 

and  Skinner.     71 
Eyebright.     Coolidge.     44 
Fables.     Aesop.     80,   8 
Fabre,  J.   H.     Insect  adventures.     25 

Our  humble  helpers.     20 

Secret  of  every-day  things.     15 

Story  book  of  science.     15 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


93 


Fairbanks,    H.    W.      Stories    of    rocks    and 

minerals.     17 
Fairy  book.     Mace.     10 
Fairy  reader.     Baldwin.     9 
Fairy  ring.    Wiggln  and  Smith.    41 
Fairy  roads  to  science  town.     Hardy.     25 
Fairy  stories  and  fables.     Anderson.     9 
Fairy  tales.     Andersen.     81 
Fairy  tales.     Lansing.     10 
Fairy  tales.    St.  Nicholas.    11 
Fairy   tales   that   every   child  should  know. 

Mabie.     10 
Fairy   tales  of  a  fox,  a  dog,  a  cat  and  a 

magpie.     Longmans.     3 
Fall  of  the  year.     Sharp.     19 
Familiar  quotations.     Bartlett.     77 
Famous      discoverers      and      explorers      of 

America.     Johnston.     64 
Famous     Indian     chiefs     I     have     known. 

Howard.     73 
Famous  leaders  of  industry.     Wildman.     67 
Famous  legends.     Crommelin.     11 
Famous  men  of  Greece.    Haaren  and  Poland. 

63 
Famous  men  of  modem  times.     Haaren  and 

Poland.     64 
Famous  men  of  the  middle  ages.     Haaren. 

63 
Famous  pictures  of  real  animals.     Bryant. 

20 
Famous  scouts.     Johnston.     64 
Famous    stories    every    child    should   know. 

Mabie.     36 
Fanciful   flower    tales.      Bigham.      9 
Fanciful  tales.     Stockton.     11 
Favorite  authors  for  little  folks.  Humphreys. 

64 
Paris,  J.  T.    Makers  of  our  history.     63 

Winning  their  way.     63 

Farmer,  L.  H.    Girl's  book  of  famous  queens. 

63 
Faulkner.  G.    Red  Cross  stories  for  children. 

63 
Favorite  authors  for  little  folks.    Humphrey. 

64 
Favorite  Greek  myths.    Hyde.     7 
Ferguson,  H.  W.    Child's  book  of  the  teeth. 

31 
Field,  E.    Eugene  Field  book.    36 

Eugene  Field  reader.     36 

Lullaby-land.     38 

Poems  of  childhood.     82 

Field,  W.  T.  Finger  posts  to  children's  read- 
ing.    80 

Field  and  forest  handy  book.     Beard.     32 

Field  book  of  American  wild  flowers. 
Mathews.     77 

Fifty  common  birds  of  farm  and  orchard.    25 


Fifty  famous  people.     Baldwin.     62 
Fifty  famous  rides  and  riders.    Baldwin.    74 
Fifty  famous  stories  retold.     Baldwin.     74 
Fighters  for  peace.     Parkman.     65 
Fighters   young   Americans   want   to  know. 

Tomlinson.     67 
Fighting  engineers.     Collins.     70 
Fine  and  Industrial  arts  in  the  elementary 

schools.      Sargent.     80 
Finger  posts  to  children's  reading.    Field.  80 
Finnemore,  J.     Wolf  patrol.     40 
Fire  fighters  and  their  pets.     Downee.    14 
First  aid  for  boys.     Cole  and  Ernst     81 
First  book  In  American  history.     Eggleston. 

71 
First  book  in  geology.     Shaler.     18 
First  book  of  forestry.     Roth.     19 
First  lessons  with  plants.     Bailey.     18 
First   steps    in    the    enjoyment   of    pictures. 

Oliver.     35 
Fisher,   E.  F.     Resources  and  Industries  of 

the  United  States.     28 
FItzhugh,  P.  K.     For  Uncle  Sam,  boss.     47 
In  the  path  of  La  Salle.     47 


Five    little    Peppers    and    how    they    grew. 

Sidney.     53 
Five  little  strangers.     Schwartz.     61 
Flamingo  feather.     Munroe.     50 
Fletcher.   M.   E.  B.     Old  settler  tales.     47 
Flowers  and  their  friends.     Morley.     19 
Fly-aways  and  other  seed  travelers.     Fultz. 

19 
Foa,  E.     Boys'  life  of  Napoleon.     69 
Folk-lore  readers.    Grover.     2 
Folk-lore   stories  and  proverbs,     Wlltse.      4 
Following  the  ball.     Dudley.    46 
Foods  and  their  uses.     Carpenter.     27 
Football  without  a  coach.     Camp.     32 
Foote,  A.  E.,  and  Skinner,  A.  W.    Explorers 

and  founders  of  America.     71 
For  the  children's  hour.     Bailey  and  Lewis. 

35 
For  the  story  teller.     Bailey.     79 
For  Uncle  Sam,  boss.     FItzhugh.     47 
Forbush,    W.    B.      Young    folks'    book    <rf 

Ideals.     5 
Forecasting   the    weather.      U.    S.    Weather 

bureau.     18 
Forman,  S.  E.     Stories  of  useful  Inventions. 

28 
Foster,  E.  W.    Elementary  woodworking.    30 
Foster,  M.  H.,  and  Cummings,  M.  H.    Asgard 

stories.     7 
Foster,   0.    H.     Cooking  for  little  girls.   SO 

Gardening  for  little  girls.     20 

Sewing  for  little  girls.     30 

FouIke,  E.  E.  Twilight  stories.  36 
Founders  of  our  country.  Coe.  63 
Four  American   explorers.     Klngsley-     04 


94 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Four  American  Indians.    WWtney  and  Perry. 

74 
Four  American  inventors.    Perry.     65 
Four  American  naval  heroes.     Beebe.     62 
Four  American  patriots.     Burton.     62 
Four  American  pioneers.     Perry  and  Beebe. 

65 
Four  American  poets.    Cody.    62 
Four  famous  American  writers.     Cody.     63 
Four  great  Americans.     Baldwin.     62 
Four  old  Greeks.     Hall.     7 
Four-footed  friends.     Smith.     24 
Four-footed  wilderness  people.     Doming.    82 
France,  A.    Honey  bee.     82 
Francillon,  R.  E.    Gods  and  Heroes.    7 
Franck,  H.  A.    Working  my  way  around  the 

world.     58 
Franklin.   B.     Autobiography.     68 
Fraser,  C.  C.    Boys'  book  of  battles.     75 

Secrets  of  the   earth.     17 

Work-a-day  heroes.     63 

Young  citizen's  own  book.     14 

Freeman,  F.  N.     Psychology  of  the  common 

branches.      80 
Freeman,   M.   E.  W.     In  colonial  times.     47 
French,  H.  W.     Lance  of  Kanana.     47 
Frentz,  E.  W.    Uncle  Zeb  and  his  friends.  47 
Friendly  stars.     Martin.     16 
Friends  in  bookland.     Hope.     39 
Friends  in  feathers  and  fur.     Johonnot.     22 
Frozen  north.     Horton.     58 
Fryer,  J.  E.     Mary  Frances  cook  book.     30 
Mary  Frances  first  aid  book.     31 

Mary  Frances  garden  book.     30 

Mary  Frances  housekeeping  book.    30 

Mary  Frances  sewing  book.     30 

Fullerton,    E.    L.     Small  gardens  for  small 

folks.     20 
Fultz,    F.    M.      Fly-aways    and    other    seed 

travelers.     19 
Fun  of  cooking.     Burrell.     29 
Funk     and     Wagnali's     Concise     Standard 

dictionary.     77 
Fur-seal's  tooth.     Munroe.     50 
Games  for  boys.     Ripley.     33 
Games  for  everybody.     Hofmann.     33 
Games,   seatwork   and   sense   training   exer- 
cises.    Holton  and  Kimball.     80 
Gardening  for  little  girls.     Foster.     20 
Gask,   L.     Treasury  of  animal   stories.     22 
Gates,  Mrs.  J.  8.     Child's  first  book.     2 
General    Crook    and    the    fighting    Apaches. 

Sabin.     52 
Geographical  readers.     Carpenter.     57 
Geographical  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     60 
German  household  tales.     Grimm.     10 
Geronimo.     Story  of  his  life.     68 
Ghosh,   S.    K.     Wonders  of  the  jungle.     21 

Books  I.  and  II. 
Giant  Sun  and  his  family.     Proctor.     16 


Gibson,   W.    H.     Blossom   hosts   and   insect 

guests.     19 
Gilbert,   H.     Boys'  book  of  pirates.     63 
Gilman,   B.     Robert  E.  Lee.     69 
Gilmore,  A.  F,    Birds  through  the  year.     25 
Gingerbread  boy.     4 

Girl's  book  of  famous  queens.     Farmer.     63 
Girl's  book  of  the  Red  Cross.     Hyde.     14 
Girl's  dream  of  pictures  and  paintings.     34 
Girls  of  '64.     Knipe.     49 
Glimpses  of  nature  for  little  folks.     Grield. 

15 
Glover,    E.    H.     "Dame    Curtsey's"   book  of 

games.     32 
Godolphin,   M.     Aesop's  fables  in  words  of 

one  syllable.     8 
Gods  and  heroes.     Francillon.     7 
Golden  black  bird.     4 
Golden  fleece.     Baldwin.     6 
Golden  goose.     Brooke.     1 
Golden  goose  and  other  fairy  tales.    Tappan. 

11 
Golden  numbers.     WIggin  and  Smith.     41 
Golden  staircase.     Chisholm.     38 
Goldsmith,  0.    Goody  Two-shoes.     2 
Good  citizenship.    Richman  and  Wallach.  15 
Good  old  stories  for  boys  and  girls.     Smith. 

37 
Goody  Two-shoes.     Goldsmith.     2 
Goops  and  how  to  be  them.     Burgess.     1 
Gordy,  W.  F.    American  leaders  and  heroes. 


Stories  of  American  explorers.     71 


Gould,  E.  L.     "Little  Women"  play.     39 
Grandfather's  stories.     Johonnot.    75 
Grandmother's  story  of  Bunker  Hill  battle. 

Holmes.     39 
Grant,  U.  S.     Coombs.     68 
Great   American    industries.      Rocheleau.      4 

Vols.     28 
Great  Inventors  and  their  inventions.    Bach- 

man.     62 
Great  artists.     Keysor.     34 
Greek  photoplays.    Seachrest.    8 
Green  Mountain  boys.     Thompson.     54 
Greene,  F.  N.    Legends  of  King  Arthur  and 

his  court.     12 
Green,  H.    Coal  and  the  coal  mines.     17 
Grey,  Z.    Young  forester.    47 
Griel,   K.  A.     Glimpses  of  nature  for  litUe 

folks.     15 
Griffin,  G.  8.    Yoiuig  folks  book  of  etiquette. 

5 
Griffis,   W.    E.     Young  people's   history   of 

Holland.      75 

Young   people's   history   of   the    Pil- 

grims.    71 
Grimm,  J.  L.  K.,  and  W.  K.    German  house- 
hold tales.     10 

Grimm's  fairy  Ules.     82 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


95 


Grimm's  fairy  tales.     82 

Grinnell,    G.    B.     Jack  among  the  Indians. 

47 
Jack  in  the  Rockies.     47 

Jack,  the  young  ranchman.     47 

When  buffalo  ran.     47 

Grinnell,  G.  B.,  and  Swan,  E.  L.    Harper's 

camping  and  scouting.     33 
Grit-a-plenty.     Wallace.     55 
Grover,  E.  0.     Art-literature  readers.     2 

Folk-lore  readers.     2 

Overall  boys.     2 

Sunbonnet  babies  primer.     2 

Guerber,  H.  A.    Story  of  modem  France.    75 

Story  of  old  France.     75 

Story  of  the  chosen  people.     5 

—  Story  of  the  English.     74 

Story  of  the  Greeks.     75 

Story  of  the  Greeks.     75 

—  Story  of  the  Romans.     75 

Guide     to    biography    for    young    readers; 
American  men  of  action.    Steven- 
son.    66 
Gulick,   Mrs.  C.   E.  V.     Emergencies.     31 

List  of  Indian  words.     33 

Gulliver's   travels.      Swift.      54 

Haaren,  J.   H.     Famous  men  of  the  middle 

ages.      63 
Haaren,  J.  H.,  and  Poland,  A.  B.     Famous 

men  of  Greece.     63 

Famous   men    of   modem    times.      64 

Hagedorn,     H.     Boys'     and    girls'     life    of 

Theodore  Roosevelt.     69 
Half-back.     Barbour.     42 
Hale,  E.  E.    Boys'  heroes.    64 

Man  without  a  country.     47 

Stories  of  invention.     28 

Hale,  L.  P.     Peterkin  papers.     47 
Hall,  A.  N.     Boy  craftsman.     30 

Carpentry   and   mechanics   for   boys. 

30 
Hall,  A.  N.,  and  Perkins,  D.    Handicraft  for 

handy  girls.     30 
Hall,  F.  H.     Manners  for  boys  and  girls.     5 
Hall,  J.     Four  old  Greeks.     7 
— -  Men  of  old  Greece.     64 

Our  ancestors  in  Europe.     71 

-— — -  Viking  tales.     12 

Hall,  M.  L.,  and  Palmer,  8.  E.     Story  plays 

for  little  children.     39 
Hail,  S.  R.    How  to  get  a  position  and  how 

to  keep  it.     79 
Hamilton,  J.  G.  de  R.,  and  Mrs.  M.  C.    Life 

of  Robert  E.  Lee.     69 
Hamilton,  M.  A.    Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 

69 
Hamlin,  M.  C.     Nan  at  Camp  Chicopee.     47 
Hand  book  for  boys.     American  boy  scouts. 

32 
Handicraft  for  boys.     Collins.     30 


Handicraft    for    handy    girls.       Hall     and 

Perkins.    30 
Handley,    L.   de   B.     Swimming  and  water- 
manship.    33 
Hans  Brlnker.     Dodge.     46,  82 
Hans,  the  Eskimo.     Scandlin.     60 
Happy   tale3   for   story   time.      Skinner.      87 
Harboe,  P.     Child's  story  of  Hans  Christian 

Andersen.    67 
Hardy,  Mrs.  A.  C.     Sea  stories  for  wonder 

eyes.     16 
Hardy,   M.   E.,  and  A.  8.     Fairy  roads  to 

science  town,     25 
Harper's  air  craft  for  boys.     VerriU.     29 
Harper's  beginning  electricity.     Shafer.     17 
Harper's  book  for  young  gardeners.    VerriU. 

20 
Harper's  book  for  young  naturalists.  VerriU. 

21 
Harper's    camping    and    scouting.      Grinnell 

and  Swan.     32 
Harper's  electricity  book  for  boys.     Adams. 

17 
Harper's  indoor  book  for  boys.     Adams.    29 
Harper's  machinery  book  for  boys.     Adams. 

29 
Harper's  outdoor  book  for  boys.    Adams.    3|, 
Harrington,  M.  W.     About  the  weather.     17 
Harris,  J.  C.    Uncle  Remus.    12 
Uncle  Remus  and  the  Little  Boy.  12 


Hart,  A.  B.  and  others.     Source  readers  in 

American  history.     71 
Hartweli,   E.  C.     Teaching  of  History.     80 
Hartley,    C.    P.     How   to   grow  an   acre  of 

corn.     19 
Haunter  of  the  Pine  Gloom.     Roberts.     23 
Haunters  of  the  Silences.     Roberts.     21 
Hawkes,  G.    Trail  to  the  woods.     21 
Wood  and  water  friends.     22 


Hawksworth,    H.     Strange   adventures   of 

pebble.     18 
Hawthorne,  N.    Tanglewood  tales.     7,  82 
Wonder  book.     7,  82 


Hazard,  B.    Three  years  with  the  poets.    39 

Heidi.     Spyri.     53,  83 

Hellenic  tales.     Carpenter.     6 

Helprin,   L.     Historical  reference  book.     77 

Helps  for  ambitious  girls.     Drysdale.     79 

Henry,  0.    Ransom  of  Red  Chief.     47 

Hen-Toh.     Tales  of  the  Bark  Lodges.     73 

Her  sixteenth  year.     Brown.     43 

Heraklcs,  the  hero  of  Thebes.  Burt  and 
Ragozin.     6 

Hero  of  Lake  Erie.    Barnes.     69 

Hero  stories.    Bailey.     62 

Hero  stories  from  American  History.  Blals- 
dell  and  Ball.     70 

Hero  stories  from  American  history.  Roose- 
velt and  Lodge.     66 

Hero  stories  of  France.     Tappaii.     67 


96 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Hero  tales  told  in  school.     Baldwin.     12 
Heroes  every  child  should  know.    Mabie.    65 
Heroes  of  Asgard.     Kearj'.     7 
Heroes  of  chivalry.     Maitland.     13 
Heroes  of  every-day  life.     Coe.     63 
Heroes  of  myth.     Price  and  Gilbert.     8 
Heroes    of    the    middle    west;    the    French. 

Catherwood.      70 
Heroes  of  today.     Parkman.     65 
Heroines  every   child  should  know.     Mabie. 

65 
Heroines   of   modern   progress.     Adams   and 

Foster.     62 
Heroines  of  Service.     Parkman.     65 
Heyliger,   W.     Hugh   Benton.     48 
Hiawatha   primer.     Holbrook.      2 
Hiawatha,  Song  of.     Longfellow.     39 
Hidden   people.      Miller.      50 
Hidden  treasure  of  Rasmola.     Rihbany.     60 
Higgins,  M.  M.    Little  gardens  for  boys  and 

girls.     20 
Hugh  Benton.     Heyliger.     48 
High  school  debate.     Bobbins.     78 
Hill,  F.  T.     On  the  Trail  of  Grant  and  Lee. 

68 

On  the  trail  of  Washington.     70 

Hinsdale,   B.   A.     How  to  study  and  teach 

history.     80 
Historic  girls.     Brooks.     62 
Historic  events  of  colonial  days.     Holland. 

71 
Historical  reference  book.     Helprin.     77 
History    of    everyday    things     in    England. 

Quennell.     74 
Hlx,    M.     Approved    selections   for   reading 

and  memorizing.     39 

Once-upon-a-time    stories.      2 

Hofmann,  M.  C.     Games  for  everybody.     33 
Hodges,  G.     When  the  King  came.     5 
Holbrook,  F.     Hiawatha  primer.     2 

Northland  heroes.     12 

Round  the  year  in  myth  and  song. 

7 
Holden,  E.  S.    Earth  and  Sky.     16 

Our  country's  flag.     14 

Real  things   in  nature.     16 

Holland,  R.  S.     Blackbeard's  island.     48 

Boy  Scouts  at  Birchbark  island.     48 

Historic  events  of  colonial  days.     71 

Lafayette,  we  come.     68 

Holmes,    0.    W.      Grandmother's    story    of 

Bunker  Hill  battle.     39 
Holton,    M.    A.,    and    Kimball,    E.      Games, 

seatwork      and      sense      training 

exercises.     80 
Home    book    of    verse    for    young    people. 

Stevenson.    41 
Home  life  around   the   world.     Mirick.     59 
Home  life  in  all  lands.     Morris.     60 
Home  life  in  colonial  days.     Earle.     71 


Home-made   electrical    apparatus.      Morgan. 

17 
Homer.     Children's  Homer.     Colum.     7 
Honey  bee.     France.     82 
Hoof  and  claw.     Roberts.     23- 
Hoosier   school-boy.     Eggleston.     46 
Hope,  W.   G.     Friends  in  Bookland.     39 
Hornaday,  W.  L.    American  natural  history. 

21 
Home.   0.    B.,   and   Scobey,    K.    L.     Stories 

of  great  arists.     34 
Horton,   E.     Frozen  north.     58 
House  fly.     Howard.     25 
House  of  the  heart.    Mackay.     40 
Household    history    of    the    United    States. 

Eggleston.     71 
Houston,   E.  J.     Wonder  book  of  the  atmos- 
phere.     18 
How  boys  and  girls  can  earn  money.    Bows- 
field.     29 
How  the  people  rule.     Hoxie.     14 
How  the  world  is  clothed.     Carpenter.     28 
How  the  world  is  fed.     Carpenter.     28 
How  the  world  is  housed.     Carpenter.     28 
How  to  dress  a  doU.     Morgan.     31 
How  to  get  a  position  and  how  to  keep  it 

Hall.     79 
How  to  grow  an  acre  of  corn.    Hartley.     19 
How  to  have  bird  neighbors.     Patteson.     25 
How  to  know  wild  flowers.     Dana.     77 
How  to  make  baskets.     White.     31 
How  to  organize  a  library.     Miller.     78 
How  to  play  baseball.     McGraw.     33 
How  to  study  and  teach  history.     Hinsdale. 

80 
How  to  study   and   teaching  how   to    study. 

McMurray.     80 
How  to  tell  stories  to  children.     Bryant.     79 
How  to  train  your  own  dogs.     Mooney.     21 
How   two   boys    made   their   own    electrical 

apparatus.     St.   John.     17 . 
How  we   are   clothed.      Chamberlain.      28 
How  we  are  fed.     Chamberlain.     28 
How  we  are  sheltered.     Chamberlain.     28 
How  we  travel.     Chamberlain.     57 
Howard,   F.  W.     Banbury  Cross  stories.     2 
Howard,   L.   0.     House  fly.     25 
Howard.   M.     Truly  stories  from  the  surely 

Bible.     5 
Howard,    0.    0.      Famous    Indian    chiefs    I 

have  known.     73 
Howe  lis,   W.    D.     Christmas  every  day  and 

other  stories.     48 
Hoxie,  C,   D.     How  the  people  rule.     14 
Hoyt   D.   L.     Barbara's  heritage.     48 
Huckleberry  Finn.     Twain.     54 
Hughes,  T.     Tom  Brown's  school  days.     48 
Hulst,   C.  8.     Indian  sketches.     73 
Human  behavior.     Colvin  and  Bagley.     80 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


97 


Humphrey,  Mrs.  F.  A.    Favorite  authors  for 

Uttle  folks.     64 
Hundred   fables.     L'Estrange.      8 
Hunt,  C.  W.    Little  house  in  the  woods.     48 
Husband,  J.     Americans  by   adoption.     64 
Hutchinson.  W.     Child's  day.     31 
Hutton,  J.  G.    Things  to  make.     30 
Hyde,  L.  S.     Favorite  Greek  myths.     7 
Hyde,  M,  K.     Girl's  book  of  the  Red  Cross. 

14 
Hyde,  W.  D.    School  speaker  and  reader.    36 
Ice   queen.     Ingersoll.     48 
lies,    G.     Leading  American   inventors.      64 
Iliad.    Iliad  for  boys  and  girls.    Church.     6 

Story   of   the   Iliad.     Brooks.      6 

Iliad  for  boys  and  girls.     Church.     6 
Imlach,   G.    M.     Story  of  Columbus.     68 

In  African  forest  and  jungle.     Du  Chaillu. 

22 
In  colonial  times.     Freeman.     47 
In  the  days  of  Alfred  the  Great.     Tappan. 

74 
In  the  days  of  Queen  Victoria.    Tappan.    69 
In  the  days  of  the  guild.     Lamprey.     49 
In   the   great   Apache   forest.      Schultz.      52 
In  the  path  of  LaSalle.     Fitzhugh.     47 
Indian  boyhood.     Eastman.     73 
Indian  child  life.     Deming.     73 
Indian   folk  tales.     Nixon-Roulet.     73 
Indian  hero  tjiles.     Wilson.     74 
Indian  heroes  and  great  chieftians.     East- 
man.    73 
Indian  history  for  young  folks.     Drake.     73 
Indian   legends.     Bemister.     72 
Indian  legends  retold.     Eastman.     73 
Indian  scout  talks.     Eastman.     32 
Indian   sketches.     Hulst.     73 
Indian  stories,     St.  Nicholas.     74 
Industrial  studies :  United  States.    Allen.    27 
Ingersoll,  E.     Ice  queen.     48 

Wild  neighbors.     21 

Ingpen,   R.     One  thousand  poems  for  chil- 
dren.    39 
Insect  adventiures.     Fabre.     25 
Inventions  of  the  great  war.     Bond.     27 
Iron  star.     True.     54 
Irving,   W.     Legend   of  Sleepy  Hollow.     12 

Rip  Van  Winkle.     12 

Isabel  Carleton's  year.     Ashmun.     42 

Island  stories.     St.   Nicholas.     60 

Island  story.     Marshall.     82 

Ivanhoe.     Scott.     52 

Jack  among  the  Indians.     Grinnell.     47 

Jack  and  the  bean  stalk,  and  Brother  and 

sister.     3 
Jack  and  Jill.    Alcott.     42 
Jack  and  Nell  in  field  and  forest    Speed.  16 
Jack  Banister's  fortunes.     Pyle.     51 
Jack  Heaton,  veireless  operator.     Collins.    44 
Jack  in  the  BocUes.     Grinnell.    47 


Jack  of  all  trades.     Beard.     29 

Jack,    the   young  ranchman.     OrizmeU.     47 

Jackanapes.     Ewing.     46 

Jackson,   H.   H.     Nelly's  silver  mine.     48 

Jackson,  0.   P.,   and   Evans,   F.   E.     Marvel 

book  of  American  ships.     14 
Jacobs,  C.  E.     Texas  blue  bonnet.     48 
Jacobs,  J.    Book  of  wonder  voyages.     75 
Jacobs,  N.  C.    Art  and  life  primer.     2 
James,  H.    Building  of  cities.     14 
James  Whitcomb  Riley  reader.     37 
Janvier,  T.  A.    Aztec  treasure  house.    48 
Japanese  fairy  tales.     Williston.     11 
Japanese  girls  and  women.     Bacon.     57 
Jataka  tales.     7 

Jeanne  d'Arc.     Wilmot-Buxton.      68,   81 
Jenkins,  M.    Norfolk  Boy  Scouts.     48 
Jenks,    A.    E.      Childhood    of    Ji-Shib,    the 

Ojibwa.     73 
Jenks,  T.     Chemistry  for  yoimg  people.     18 
Jewett,  S.  0.    Betty  Leicester.     48 

Betty  Leicester's  Christmas.     48 

Jingle  primer.     Browne   and   Bailey.     1 
Joan  of  Arc.     Boutet  de  Monvel.     81 
John   Baring's   house.      Singmaster.     58 
John  Halifax,  gentleman.    Mulock.     50 
John  of  the  woods.     Brown.     43  ^ 

Johnny  Crow's  garden.     Brooke.     1 
Johnson,    Mrs.    C.      Earning    her    way    to 

college.     48 
Johnson,  C.    When  mother  lets  us  cook.    30 
When  mother  lets  us  help.     30 


Johnson,  R.  B.     Stories  for  the  Bible  hour. 

5 
Johnston,  C.  H.  L.    Famous  discoverers  and 

explorers  of  America.     64 
Famous  scouts.     64 


Johnston,  E.  L.,  and  Barnum,  M.  D.  Book 

of  plays  for  little  actors.  39 
Johonnot,  J.  Book  of  cats  and  dogs.  22 
Friends  in  feathers  and  fur.  22 

Grandfather's  stories.     75 

Stories  of  the  olden  time.     75 


Jolly  book  of  fim  craft     Beard.     32 
Jordan,   D.  S.     Story  of  Matka.     22 
True  tales  of  birds  and  beasts.     22 


Jo's  boys.     Alcott.     42 

Juan  and  Jxianita.     Baylor.     42 

Judd,  M.  C.    Wigwam  stories  told  by  Nortb 

American  Indians.     73 
Judson,  C.  I.    Jimlor  cook  book.     30 
Jungle  book.     Kipling.     22 
Jimlor  cook  book.     Judson.     30 
Just  for  fun.     Currier.     32 
Just  Patty.     Webster.     55 
Just-so   stories.      Kipling.      49,    22 
Katrlna.     Deland.     45 
Keary,  A.,  and  E.     Heroes  of  Asgard.     7 
Keene,  J.  H.    Boys'  own  guide  to  fishing.   88. 
Keffer,  C.  A.     Nature  studies  on  the  farm.     19 


98 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Keller,  H.    Story  of  my  life.     68  I 

Kelley,  J.  G.    Boy  mineral  collectors.     18 
Kellogg.  V.  L.     Nuova.     25  j 

Kelley,  Mrs.  M.  B.    Short  stories  of  our  shy  i 
neighbors.     21  j 

Kelman,   J.    H.     Stories  from  Chaucer.     36  I 

Stories  from  the  crusades.     75  I 

Kenilworth.      Scott.      52 

Kewpie  primer.     O'Neill.     1 
Keysor,  J.   E.     Great  artists.     34 

Sketches    of   American    writers.      64 

Kilbon,    B.    G.     Elementary   woodwork.     30 
Kidnapped.     Stevenson,     53,  83 

Kim.     Kipling.     49 

King,  C.     Cadet  days.     48 

King  Arthur  and  his  knights.     Radford.     13 

King  Arthur  stories.     Malory.     13 

King  of  the  golden  river.     Ruskin.      11 

King  of   the   Mamozekel.     Roberts.      23 

Kings  in  exile.     Roberts.     23 

Kindred  of  the  wild.     Roberts.     23 

Kingsley,  C.     Water  babies.     10 

Kingsley,    N.   F.     Four  American  explorers. 

64  { 
Kipling,   R.     Captains  courageous.     49 
Jungle  book.     22 

Just-so  stories.     22,  49 

Kim.     49 

• Kipling  reader.     36     2  vols. 

• Puck  of  Pook's  Hill.     10 

Kirby,    M.,   and    E.     Aunt  Martha's  comer 

cupboard.     28 
Klickmann,    F.      Little    girl's    knitting    and 

crochet  book.     30 
Knlpe,  Mrs.  E.  E.,  and  A.  A.     Girls  of  '64. 

49 

Maids  of  old  Manhattan.     49 

Vive   la   France.      49 

Knowing  insects  through  stories.     Brailliar. 

25 
Krag  and  Johnny  Bear.     Seton.     24 
Krout,  M.  H.     Alice's  visit  to  the  Hawaiian 

islands.      58 
Kueiler,  J.  van  A.     Young  lion  of  Flanders. 

49 
Lads  and  lassies  of  other  days.     Price.     51 
Lady  of  the  lake.     Scott.     40 
Lafayette,  we  come.     Holland.     68 
Lagerlof,  S.     Wonderful  adventures  of  Nils. 

10 
Lamb,  C.     Adventures  of  Ulysses.     7 
Lamb,  C,  and  M.    Tales  from  Shakespeare. 

36,   82 
Lamprey,  L.     In  the  days  of  the  guild.     49 

Masters  of  the  guild.     49 

Lance   of  Kanana.     French.     47 
Land  of  Fair-play.     Parsons.     14 
Land  of  footprints.     White.     61 
Land  of  pluck.     Dodge.     46 
Land  of  Song.     Shute.     40 


Land  we  live  in.     Price.     14 

Lane,  M.  A.     Strange  lands  near  home.     58 

Toward  the  rising  sun.     58 

Wide  world.     58 

Lane,   M.  A.   L.     Stories  for  children.     2 
Lane,    M.    A.    L.,    and    Hill,    M.     American 

history  in  literature.     77 
Lang,  A.     Aladdin  and  the  wonderful  lamp. 

10 

Animal  story  book.     22 

Arabian  nights'   entertainment.     9 

Blue  fairy  book.      10 

Pretty  Goldilocks,  and  other  stories. 

10 

Tales  of  Troy  and  Greece.     7 

Lanier,   H.  W.     Book  of  bravery.     64 
Lanier,  S.     Boys'  King  Arthur.     12 

Lanier  book.     36 

Lansing,    IW.    F.     Barbarian  and  noble.     64 

Fairy  tales.     10 

Life  in  the  greenwood.     12 

Page,   esquire  and  knight.     12 

Rhymes  and  stories.     2 

—  Tales  of  old  England.     12 

LaRamee,    L.    de.     Bimbi   stories   for   chil- 
dren.    49 

Dog  of  Flanders.     49 

Larkspur.     Abbott.     42 

Lasalle,    M.    A.     Short   stories   of  the    new 

America.     49 
Last  of  the   Mohicans.     Cooper.      44 
Later  cave-men.     Dopp.     26 
Lawler,    T.    B.      Story    of    Colxunbus    and 

Magellan.     64 
Lawrence,  W.  M.,  and  Blackman,  0.    River- 
side song  book.     34 
Lawson,  W.  P.    Log  of  a  timber  cruiser.    49 
Lays  of  ancient  Rome.     Macaulay.     40 
Leaders  of  the  great  war.     Rowell.     66 
Leaders  to  liberty.     Wade.     67 
Leading   American    inventors.      lies.      64 
Lefevre,  F.     Cock,  the  mouse  and  the  little 

red  hen.     2 
Legend  of  Sleepy  Hollow.     Irving.     12 
Legends    of    King    Arthur    and    his    court. 

Greene.     12 
Legends  of  the  red  children.     Chadwick.     73 
Legends    that    every    child    should    know. 

Mabie.     12 
Leiper,    M.   A.     Teaching  language  through 
agriculture    and    domestic    science. 

80 
Le  Mair,  H.  W.     Little  people.     82 
Lessons  on  manners.     Dewey.     5 
L' Estrange,   Sir  R.     Hundred  fables.     8 
Letters  to  his  children.    Roosevelt.     69 
Life  in  the  Greenwood.     Lansing.     12 
Life  of  Abraham  Lincoln.     Moores.     69 
Life  of  Robert  E.  Lee.     Gilman.     69 
Light-bringers.     Wade.     67 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


99 


SUniier 


29 
Whittum. 


Lindsay,    M.     Mother   stories.     49 

Lion  and  tiger  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     23 

Lipplncott,  J.  W.    Btin,  a  wild  rabbit.     22 

Red  Ben,  the  fox  of  Oak  Ridge.     23 

Lisbeth  Longfrock.     Aanrud.     42 
List  of  Indian  words.     Gulick.     33 
Listening  child.     Thacher.     41 
Literature      in      the      elementary      school. 

MacClintock,     80 
Little  book  of  the  flag.     Tappan.     15 
Little  Boy  Blue.     Cory.     2 
Little  brother  to  the  bear.     Long.     23 
Little  brothers  of  the  west.    Deming.     73 
Little  candy  book  for  a  little  girl.     Water- 
man.    31 
Little  captive  lad.     Dix.     46 
Little  cook  book  for  a  little  girl.     Burrell. 

29 
Little  cousin  series.     58 
Little  cousins  of  long  ago  series.     58 
Little  curly  head.     Spyri.     53 
Little  dramas  for  primary  grades. 

and  Lawrence.       40 
Little  folks'  handy  book.     Beard. 
Little   folks   of   far-away   lands. 

61 
Little  folks  of  many  lands.     Chance.     57 
Little  folks  of  North  America.     Wade.     61 
Little  friends  In   feathers.     McFee.     25 
Little  garden   calendar  for  boys  and  girls. 

Paine.     20 
Little    gardening    book    for    a    little    girl. 

Martin.     20 
Little  gardens  for  boys  and  girls.     Higgins. 

20 
Little    girl's    knitting    and    crochet    book. 

Klickmann.      30 
Little  grey  house.     Taggart.     54 
Little  house  in  the  woods.     Hunt.     48 
Little   housekeeping   book   for    a    little   girl. 

Burrell.     29 
Little  Jarvis.     Seawell.     53 
Little  journey  series.     59 
Little  lame  prince.     Mulock.     10 
Xittle  Lord  Fauntleroy.     Burnett.     43 
Little  maid  of  Province  town.     Curtis.     45 
Xittle  men.     Alcott.     42 
Little  Miss  Phoebe  Gay.     Brown.     43 
Little  Mother  Goose.     Smith.     3 
Little  nature  studies  for  little  people.    Burt. 

15 
Little  people.     Le  Mair.     82 
Little  people  everywhere  series.     59 
Little  people  of  the  snow.     Mulets.     60 
Little    preserving    book    for    a    little    girl. 

Waterman.     31 
Little  plays  from  American  history.    Walker. 

41 
Little  princess.     Burnett.     43 
Little  prospector.    Baylor.     42 


Little  red  hen.     4 

Little  rhymes  for  little  readers.    Seegmlller. 

40 
Little  schoolmate  series.     59 
Little  sewing  book  for  a  Utile  girl.    Cornell. 

30 
Little  shepherd  of  Provence.     Stein.     53 
Little  smoke.     Stoddard.     54 
Little  star  gazers.     Schwartz.     16 
Little  stories  for  little  people.     McCullough. 

3 
Little  stories  of  France.     Button.     75 
Little  stories  of  Germany.     Button.     75 
Little  tailor  of  the  winding  way.    Crownfleld. 

45 
Little    White    Fox    and   his   arctic    friends. 

Snell.     24 
Little  women.     Alcott.     42,  81 
"Little  women"  play.     Gould,     39 
Lives  of  famous  Indian  chiefs.     Wood,     74 
Lives    of   poor    boys    who    became   famous. 

Bolton.     62 
Lives  of  the  presidents.     Ellis.     63 
Livingston,   R.     What  daddies  do.     3 
Lobo,  Rag  and  Vixen.     Seton.     24 
Lodrlx,  the  little  lake-dweller.     Wiley  and 

Edick.     27 
Log  of  a  timber  cruiser.     Lawson.     49 
Lolami.     Bayliss.     26 
Lolaml  in  Tusayan.     Bayliss.     26 
London,   J.     Brown   Wolf,   and   other  Jack 

London  stories.     50 

Call  of  the  wild.     23 

Cruize  of  the  Dazzler.     50 

Lone  Bull's  mistake.     Schultz.     52 
Lonesomest  doll.     Brown.     43 

Long,  W.  J.    Little  brother  to  the  bear.     23 

Northern  trails.     23 

Secrets  of  the  woods.     23 

Ways  of  the  wood  folk.     23 

Wilderness  ways.     23 

Wood  folk  at  school.     23 

Longfeliow,    H.    W.      Children's   ovra   Long- 
fellow.    82 

Complete   poetical   works.      39 

Evangeline.     39 

Song  of  Hiawatha.     39 

LonofoHow,  H.  W.,  and  others.     Evangeline. 

Snowbound,  etc.     39 
Longman's  fairy  readers.     3 
Loring,  J.  A.    African  adventure  stories.    23 
Lorna  Doone.     Blackmore.     43 
Lost  Indian  magic.    Moon.     50 
Lost  with  Lieutenant  Pike.    Sabln.    52 
Louisa  May  Alcott.     Moses.     67 
Louisa  May  Alcott  reader.     Alcott.     35 
Lowell,  J.  R.    Vision  of  Sir  Launfal.     39 
Loyalty   of  Elizabeth   Bess.     Scott.     52 
Lucas,   E.  V.     Book  of  verses  for  children. 

39 


100 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Lucia,  R.     Peter  and  Polly  in  autumn.     3 

Peter  and  Polly  in  spring.     3 

Peter  and  Polly  in  summer.     3 

Peter  and  Polly  in  winter.     3 

Stories  of  American  discoverers  for 

little    Americans.     71 

Lullaby-land.     Field.     38 

Lulu's  library.     Alcott.     42 

Lummis,  C.  F.  Some  strange  comers  of  our 
own  country.     59 

Pueblo  Indian  Folk  stories.     73 

Lutkenhaus,  A.  M.  Plays  for  school  chil- 
dren.    39 

Lyman.  E.    Story  telling.     80 

Mabie,  H.  W.  Fairy  tales  every  child  should 
know.     10 

Famous    stories    every   child   should 

know.     36 

Heroes  every  child  should  know.     65 

Legends    that    every     child    should 

know.     12 

Myths  that  every  child  should  know. 

7 

Norse  stories.     7 

Mable,  H.  W.,  and  Stephens,  K.  Heroines 
every   child   should   know.      65 

MacClintock,  P.  L.  Literature  in  the  ele- 
mentary school.     80 

MacClintock,    S.     Philippines.      59 

McCuriough,  A.  W.  Little  stories  for  little 
people.     3 

Macdonald,  G.    Princess  and  the  goblin.     10 

Mace,  J.     Fairy  book.     10 

McFee,  I.     Little  friends  in  feathers.     25 

Stories  of  American  inventions.     65 

Treasury  of  flower  stories.     10 

Treasury  of  myths.     7 

McGraw,  J.  J.    How  to  play  baseball.     33 
Mcintyre,    M.   A.     Cave  boy  of  the  age  of 

stone.     26 
McKeever,  W.  A.     Training  the  boy.     79 
Mackay,  C.  D.     House  of  the  heart.     40 

Patriotic   plays  and  pageants.     40 

Silver  thread.      40 

Mackey,  M.  S.,  and  M.  G.    Pronunciation  of 

10,000  proper  names.     77 
Macleod,  M.     Book  of  ballad  stories.     12 

■ Book  of  King  Arthur  and  his  noble 

knights.      12 

Shakespeare   story-book.     36 

McMurry,  C.  A.     Special  method  in  reading 

in  the  grades.     80 

MeMurry,  F.  M.  How  to  study  and  teach- 
ing how  to  study.     80 

MeNally,  G.  M.  Babyhood  of  wild  animals. 
21 

McSpadden,  J.  W.  Boys'  book  of  famous 
soldiers.     65 

Stories  from  Wagner.     13 

Maeaulay,  T.  B.    Lays  of  ancient  Rome.    40 


Macy,    J.    C.      Young    people's    history    of 

music.     34 
Maeterlinck,  M.    Blue  bird  for  children.     10 
Maggie  McLanehan.     Zollinger.     56 
Magic  casements.     Wiggin  and  Smith.     11 
Magic  forest.     White.      55 
Magic  of  science.     Collins.     32 
Magic  pictures  of  the  long  ago.     Chandler. 

34 
Maid  of  old  Manhattan.     Knipe.     49 
Maid  of  Orleans.     Smith.     68 
Maitland,  L.    Heroes  of  chivalry.     13 
Makers  of  our  history.    Faris.     63 
Makers  of  the  nation.     Coe.     63 
Making  tin-can  toys.     Thacher.     31 
Malory,  Sir  T.    King  Arthur  stories.     13 
Man  without  a  coimtry.     Hale.     47 
Manners  for  boys   and  girls.     Hall.     5 
Manual  of  activities.     32 
Manufactures.     Rocheleau.     28 
Marcy,    Mrs.    M.    E.     Stories   of  the   cave- 
people,     26 
Marden,  0.  S.     Stories  from  life.     65 
Marjorie  Daw,  and  other  stories.     Aldrich. 

42 
Marriott,  C.     Uncle  Sam's  business.     14 
Marryat,  F.    Masterman  Ready.    50 
Marshall,  H.  W.    English  literature  for  boys 

and  girls.     82 

Island  story.     82 

Martin,    A.      Little    gardening    book    for    a 

little  girl.     20 
Martin,  M.    Friendly  stars.     16 
Martineau,  H.     Peasant  and  the  prince.    50 
Marvel   book   of   American   ships.      Jackson 

and  Evans.     14 
Marwick.  W.  F.,  and  Smith,  W.  A.     South 

American  republics.    59 
Mary  Frances  cook  book.     Fryer.     30 
Mary  Frances  first  aid  book.     Fryer.     31 
Mary  Frances  garden  book.     Fryer.     30 
Mary  Frances  housekeeper  book.    Fryer.    30 
Mary  Frances  sewing  book.     Fryer.     30 
Mary's  garden  and  how  it  grew.     Duncan.. 

20 
Masefield,  J.     Book  of  discoveries.     82 
Massie,  W.  W.,  and  Underbill,  C.  R.    Wire-^ 

less  telegraphy  and  telephone.    17 
Master  of  the  Strong  Hearts.     Brooks.     43- 
Master   Simon's   garden.     Meigs.     50 
Master  Skylark.     Bennett.     43 
Masterman  Ready.     Marryat.     50 
Masters   of   space.     Towers.      67 
Masters  of  the  guild.     Lamprey.     49 
Mathews,    F.    S.     Field   book   of   American 

wild  flowers.     77 
Mathews,  J.  B.     Poems  of  American  patrio- 
tism.    40 
Mathiews,  F.  A.    Boy  scout  book  of  stories. 

50 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


loi 


Boy  Scout's  year  book.     33 

Mazli.     Spyri.      53 

Meadowcroft,  W.  H.    A  B  C  of  electricity. 
17 

Boy's  life  of  Edison.     68 

Meigs,  C.    Master  Simon's  garden.     50 

Pool  of  stars.     50 

Men  of  iron.     Pyle.     51 

Men  of  old  Greece.     Hall.     64 

Menefee,  M.    Child  stories  from  the  masters. 

36 
Merry  adventures  of  Robin  Hood.    Pyle.    83 
Merry  Andrew.     Weir.     55 
Merry  animal  tales.     Bigham.     9 
Merry  lips.     Dix.     46 
Mighty  animals.     Mix.     21 
MiU  on  the  floss.     Eliot.     46 
Miller,  J.    True  bear  stories.    23 
Miller,  L.  E.    Hidden  people.    50 
Miller,  0.  T.     Children's  book  of  birds.     25 

Our  home  pets.   21 

True  bird  stories  from  my  notebook. 

25 
Miller,  Zana  K.    How  to  organize  a  library. 

78 
Minerals.     Rocheieau.     28 
MIntz,  F.  S.     Story  hour  plays.    40 
Mirick,  G.  A.    Home  life  around  the  world. 

59 
Mr.   Stubbs'  brother.     Otis.     51 
Mr.  Wind  and  Madame  Rain.     DeMusset.  10 
Mitchell.  A.  F.     Paz  and  Pablo.     59 
Mix,  J.  I.    Mighty  animals.     21 
Modern    reader's    Bible    for    schools:    the 

New  Testament.      Moulton.      5 
Moffet   C.     Careers  of  danger  and  daring. 

65 
Monster  hunters.     Rolt-Wheeler.     27 
Montessori  system  of  education.     Smith.     81 
Montieth,  J.    Some  useful  animals  and  what 

they  do  for  us.     21 
Moon,  G.  P.,  and  G.    Lost  Indian  magic.  50 
Mooney,  H.  J.    How  to  train  your  dogs.    21 
Moore,   M.     What  the  pictures  say.     34 
Moores,   C.  W.     Life  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 

69 
More  bed-time  stories.     Moulton.     50 
More  little  beasts  of  field  and  wood.    Cram. 

20 
Morgan,  A.   P.     Boy  electrician.     17 

Home-made  electrical  apparatus.    17 

Morgan,   M.  W.     How  to  dress  a  doll.     31 
M  or  ley,   M.  W.     Flowers  and  their  friends. 

19 

Seed-babies.     19 

Song  of  life.     16 

Morris,  0.     Home  life  in  all  lands.     60 
Moses,  B.     Louisa  May  Alcott     67 
Moseley,  E.  L.    Trees,  stars  and  birds.     16 


Mother    Goose.      Book    of    nursery    rhymes. 
Ed.  Welch.     3 

Everychlld's      Mother      Goose.      Bd. 

Wells.     3 

Little  Mother  Goose.     Smith.     3 

Mother  Goose.     3 

Mother  Goose  melodies.     Wheeler.    3 

Mother   Goose ;   or  The  old   nursery 

rhymes.     Ed  Greenway.     3 

Mother  Goose  tales.     3 

Only    true    Mother    Goose    melodies. 

Munroe  and  Francis.     3 

Songs  from  Mother  Goose.     34 

Tales  of  Mother  Goose.  Ed.  Perrault. 

3 

Volland  Mother  Goose.     83 

Mother  Goose.     4 

Mother  Goose  melodies.     Wheeler.     3 

Mother  Goose;  or,  The  old  nursery  rhymes. 

3 
Mother  Goose  tales.     3 
Mother  stories.     Lindsay.     49 
Mother's  nursery  tales.     Pyle.     10 
Motion  songs  for  public  schools.    Pray.     35 
Moulton,   L.  C.     More  bed-time  stories.     50 

New  bed-time  stories.     50 

Mowry,  W.  A.,  and  A.  M.    American  heroes 

and  heroism.     65 
Mowry,  W.  A.,  and  B.  S.  American  pioneers. 

65 
Mulets,  L.  E.    Little  people  of  the  snow.    64 
Mulock,  D.  M.    Adventures  of  a  brownie.   11 

John  Halifax,  gentleman.     50 

Little  lame  prince.     10 

Munroe,  K.    At  war  with  Pontiac.     50 

Flamingo  feather.     50 

Fur-seal's  tooth.     50 

With  Crockett  and  Bowie.     50 

Murrill,  W.   A.     Billy,   the  boy  naturalist 

51 
Murray,  0.    Child  at  play.     3 
Playtime.     3  ^ 

Story  book  treasures.     37 

Storyland.      37 

Mustafa,  the  Egyptian  boy.     Starr.     61 
My  dogs  in  the  northland.    Young.     61 
Mystery  of  Ram  island.    Ames.    42 
Mystery  stories  for  boys  and  girls.     Smith. 

37 
Myths  of  the  red  children.     Wilson.     74 
Myths  that  every  child  should  know.  Mable. 

7 
Nan  at  Camp  Chicopee.    Hamlin.     47 
Nancy  Rutledge.     Pyle.     51 
Nature  stories  for  youngest  readers.     Davis. 

20 
Nature  studies  on  the  farm.     KeCfer.     19 
Ned  and   Nan   In   Holland.     Olmstead  and 

Grant     60 


i  ^     *  *    * 


102 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Neidlinger,   W.    H.     Small   songs   for  small 

siegers.     34 
Neihardt,  J,  G.     Splendid  wayfaring.     72 
Nelly's  silver  mine.     Jackson.     48 
Nelson,    E.    W.      Wild    animals    of    North 

America.     21 
New  bed-time  stories.     Moulton.     50 
New  International  encyclopaedia.     78 
Newbolt,    Sir    H.    J.      Book    of    the    happy 

warrior.     75 

Book   of  the   long   trail.      65 

Nicolay,  H.    Boys'  life  of  Abraham  Lincoln. 

69 

Boys'   life  of  Lafayette.     68 

Boys'  life  of  Ulysses  S.  Grant.     68 

Our  nation  in   the  building.     72 

Nida,  W.    L.,  and  S.   H.     Child's  Robinson 

Crusoe.     3 
Nine  choice  poems.     Baldwin.     38 
Nightingale,  Florence.     Steedman.     69 
Nixon-Roulet.  M.  F.     Indian  folk  tales.     73 
Noel,   M.     Buz.     26 
Norfolk  Boy  Scouts.     Jenkins.     48 
Norse  stories.     Mabie.     7 
Northern  trails.     Long.     23 
Northland  heroes.     Holbrook.     12 
Niunber  stories  of  long  ago.     Smith.       16 
Nuova.     Kellogg.     25 
Nursery  tales  from  many   lands.     Skinner. 

13 
Oakleigh.     Deland.     45 
Odysseus,    the    hero    of    Ithaca.      Burt   and 

Ragozin.     6 
"Odyssey.     Odyssey     for     boys     and     girls. 

Church.     6 

Story  of  the  Odyssey.     Brooks.     6 

Story   of   the   Odyssey.      Palmer.      7 

Odyssey  for  boys  and  girls.     Church.     6 
Ogden,  H.  A.     Our  flag  and  our  songs.     34 
Olcott,  F.  J.    Bible  stories  to  read  and  tell. 

5 

Story-telling  poems.     40 

Wonder  garden.     83 

Olcott,  H.   M.     Children's  fairyland.     11 

Old-fashioned  girl.     Alcott.     42 

Old  Greek  folk  stories  told  anew.  Peabody. 
8 

Old  Greek  stories.     Baldwin.     6 

Old  Indian  legends.     Zitkala-Sa.     74 

Old  Norse  stories.     Bradlsh.     6 

Old,  old  story  book.     Tappan.     5 

Old  settler  tales.     Fletcher.     47 

Old  world  hero  stories.     Tappan.     67 

Oliver  Cromwell.     Ross.     68 

Oliver,  M.  I.  G.  First  steps  in  the  enjoy- 
ment of  pictures.     35 

Ollivant,  A.     Bob,  son  of  battle.     23 

Olmstead,  E.  G.,  and  Grant,  E.  B.  Ned  and 
Nan  in  Holland.     60 


On  board  a  United  States  battleship.    Codd. 

13 
On  Plymouth   rock.     Drake.       71 
On  the  edge  of  the  vnlderness.     Eaton.     22 
Once-upon-a-tJme  stories.    Hlx.     2 
On  the  trail  of  Grant  and  Lee.    Hill.     68 
On  the  trail  of  Washington.    Hill.    70 
One  thousand  poems  for  children.     Ingpen. 

39 
O'Neill,  R.    Kewpie  primer.     3 
Only  true  Mother  Goose  melodies.     3 
Opening  the  iron  trail.     Sabin.       52 
Opening   the   west    with    Lewis    and    Clark. 

Sabin.     52 
Orcutt  girls.     Vaile.     55 
Oregon  trail.     Parkman.     60 
O'Shea,   M.  V.     Six  nursery  classics.     11 
Otis,  J.     Mr.   Stubbs'  brother.     51 

Silent  Peter.     51 

Toby   Tyler.      51 

Otto  of  the  silver  hand.     Pyle.     51 

Ouida,  see  LaRamee,  L.  de. 

Our  American  holidays.     Schauflfler.     78 

Our  ancestors  in  Europe.     Hall.     71 

Our  country  in  poem  and  prose.     Persona. 

72 
Our  country's  flag.     Holden.     14 
Our  flag  and  our  songs.    Ogden.    34 
Our  home  pets.     Miller.     21 
Our  humble  helpers.     Fabre.     20 
Our  nation  in  the  building.     Nicolay.     72 
Our  national  holidays.     St.  Nicholas.     72 
Overall  boys.     Grover.     2 
Page,  T,   N.     Page  story  book.     37 

Two   little   Confederates.      51 

Page,  esquire  and  knight.     Lansing.     12 
Paine,  A.  B.     Arkansas  bear.     51 

Boys'  life  of  Mark  Twain.     69 

Little  garden  calendar  for  boys  and 

girls.     20 
Palmer,  G.  H.     Story  of  the  Odyssey.     7 
Panama,  past  and  present.     Bishop.     70 
Panther   stories.      St.    Nicholas.      23 
Parkman,  F.     Boys'  Parkman.     72 

Oregon  trail.     60 

Parkman,   M.    R.  Fighters  for  peace.     65 

Heroes  of  today.     65 

Heroines  of  service.     65 

Parsons,   G.     Land  of  Fair-play.     14 
Patch,    E.    M.     Dame   Bug  and   her  babies. 

26 
Pathfinder.     Cooper.     44 
Patriotic  plays   and   pageants.     Mackay.   40 
Patriotism  and  the  flag.     St.  Nicholas.     66 
Patteson,  S.  L.    How  to  have  bird  neighbors. 

25 
Paz  and  Pablo.     Mitchell.     59 
Peabody,  J.  P.     Old  Greek  folk  stories  told 

anew.     8 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


103 


Peace  and  patriotism.     Smith.     37 
Peacock  pie.       De  la  Mare.     38 
Pearl  story  book.     Skinner.     37 
Peasant  and  the  prince.     Martineau.     50 
Peattie,  Mrs.  E.  W.     Sarah  Brewster's  rela- 
tives.    51 
Peeps  at  many   lands   series.     60 
Penrod.     Tarkington.     54 
People's   school.     Weeks.      79 
Perdue,  H.  A.    Child  life  in  other  lands.    60 
Perkins,    Mrs.    L.    F.     Dutch   twins  primer. 

51,  60 

Dutch  twins.     51 

Twin  series.     51 

Perrault,  C.     Tales  of  Mother  Goose.     3 
Perry,  F.  M.    Four  American  inventors.    65 
Perry,  F.  M.,  and  Beebe,  K.    Four  American 

pioneers.     65 
Personal     recollections     of    Joan     of    Arc. 

Twain.    55 
Persons,   E.  A.     Our  country  in  poem  and 

prose.     72 
Peter  and  Polly  in  autumn.     Lucia.     3 
Peter  and  Polly  in  spring.     Lucia.     3 
Peter  and  Polly  in  summer.    Lucia.     3 
Peter  and  Polly  in  winter.     Lucia.     3 
Peter  Pan.     Barrie.     9 
Peter  Rabbit.     4 
Peterkin  papers.     Hale.     47 
Philippines.      MacClintock.      59 
Phillips,     W.     S.     Sandman;     his     Indian 

stories.      73 
Picture    stories    from    great    artists.      Cady 

and  Dewey.     34 
Pictures    that    every    child    should    know. 

Bacon.     34 
Pilgrims  of  today.     Wade.     67 
Pilgrim's  progress.     Bunyan.     5 
Pinafore  palace.     Wiggin  and  Smith.     41 
Pioneers.     Cooper.     45 
Pioneers   of   America.     Blaisdell   and  Ball. 

62 
Pied  Piper  of  Hamelin.     Browning.     81 
Places    young    Americans    want    to    know. 

Tomlinson.     61 
Plant  baby  and  its  friends.     Brovra.     18 
Plants  and  their  children.     Dana.     18 
Plays  for  school  children.     Lutkenhaus.     39 
Plays,   pantomimes   and   tableaux   for   chil- 
dren.     Smith.      41 
Play  time  primer.     Bryce.     35 
Playtime.      Murray.     3 
Pluck  on  the  long  trail.     Sabin.     32 
Plummer,  M.  W.    Roy  and  Ray  in  Mexico.  60 
Stories    from    the    Chronicle    of    the 

Cid.     37 
Poems   of  American   patriotism.     Matthews. 

40 
Poems   of   childhood.      Field.      82 


I  Poems  that  every  child  should  know.    Burt. 


Poetic  and  dramatic  works.     Tennyson.     41 
Polkinghorne.    R.    K.,   and    M.    I.   R.     Toy- 
making  in  school  and  home.     31 
Polly  and  Dolly.     Blaisdell.     1 
Polly  Oliver's  problem.     Wigghi.     56 
Ponsonby,  A.,  and  D.    Rebels  and  reformers. 

66 
Pool  of  stars.     Meigs.     50 
Porter.  J.     Scottish  chiefs.     51 
Porter,  J.  G.     Stars  In  song  and  legend.    16 
Posy  ring.     Wiggin  and  Smith.     41 
Potter,  B.     Tale  of  Benjamin  Bunny.     4 

Tale  of  Johnny  Townmouse.     4 

Tale  of  Peter  Rabbit.     4 

Tal©  of  Squirrel  Nutkln.     4 

Tale  of  Tom  Kitten.     4 

Poulsson,  E.     Runaway  donkey.     4 

Through  the  farmyard  gate.     4 

Powers,   E.  M.     Stories  of  famous  pictures. 

35 
Prairie.     Cooper.     45 
Pray,  M.  L.  Motion  songs  for  public  schools. 

35 
Prescott,  D.  R.    Day  In  a  colonial  home.    72 
Pressey,  P.    Vocational  reader.    66 
Pretty  Goldilocks  and.  other  stories.     LansT 

10 
Pretty  PoUy  Flinders.     Blaisdell.     1 
Price,  L.  L.    Lads  and  lassies  of  other  days. 

51 
Price,  L.  L.,  and  Gilbert,  C.  B.    Heroes  of 

myth.     8 
Price,  0.  W.    Land  we  live  In.     14 
Primer  of  parliamentary  law.     Robert.     78 
Prince  and  his  ants.     Bertelll.     25 
Prince  and  the  pauper.     Twain.     5r> 
Princess  and  the  goblin.     Macdonald.     10 
Principles  of  teaching  based  on  psychology. 
Thorndlke.     81 

^  Pritchard,    M.    T.,    and    Turkington,    G.    A. 

I  Stories  of  thrift  for  young  Ameri- 

I  cans.     6 

i  Proctor,  M.     Giant  Sun  and  his  family.     16 

I Stories  of  star  land.     16 

I  Products  of  the  soil.     Rocheleau.     28 

I  Promised  land.     Antin.     68 

i  Pronunciation     of     10,000     proper     names. 

j  Mackey.     77 

I  Psychology  of  the  common  branches.    Free- 

i  man.     80 

i  Puck  of  Pook's  Hill.     Kipling.     10 
Pueblo  Indian  folk-stories.     Lummls.     73 
Puss  in  boots-Resmard,  the  fox.     Chadwlck 

I  1 

Putnam,  E.  H.    Watty  &  Co.     51 
!  Pyle,  H.     Book  of  pirates.     83 

i Jack's   Banister's   fortunes.      51 

i Men  of  Iron.     51 


104 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Merry    adventures    (rf    Bobin    Hood. 

83   . 

Otto  of  the   silver  hand.     51 

Some    merry    adventures    of    Bobin 

Hood.     13 
Pyle,   K.     Careless  Jane.     4 

Mother's  nursery  tales.     10 

Nancy  Butledge.     51 

Quenneil,  M.,  and  C.  H.  B.  History  of  every- 
day things  in  England.     74 
Quentln  Durward.     Scott.     52 
Quicksilver    Sue.      Bichards.      52 
Bab  and  his  friends.     Brown.     22 
Backetty-packetty  house.     Burnett.     9 
Radford,     M.     L.      King    Arthur    and    his 

knights.     13 
Rankin,  C.  W.     Dandelion  cottage.     51 
Bansom  of  Bed  Chief.     Henry.     47 
Beal  things  in  nature.     Holden.     16 
Bebecca  of  Sunnybrook  Farm.     Wiggin.     56 
Bebels  and  reformers.    Ponsonby.    66 
Becitation.     Betts.     79 
Bed  Ben,  the  fox  of  Oak  Bidge.    Lippincott. 

22 
Bed  Cross  stories  for  children.  Faulkner.   63 
Redway,  J.  W.     Conunercial  Geography.     78 
Befugee  family.     Canfleld.     44 
Reinsch,  P.  S.     Civil  government.     14 

Young  citizen's  reader.     15 

Repplier,  A.    Book  of  famous  verse.     40 
Besources    and    industries    of    the    United 

States.     Fisher.     28 
Bevolutionary  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     72 
Beynard,  the  fox.     Smythe.     4 
Bhead's  illustrated  juveniles.     83 
Bhymes  and  jingles.     Dodge.     38 
Bhymes  and  stories.     Lansing.     2 
Rice,  G.    Boys'  book  of  sports.     33 
Richards,   L.   E.     Quicksilver  Sue.     52 

Captain  January.     52 

Richman,   P.  S.,  and  Waliacii,  I.  R.     Good 

citizenship.      15 
Rihbany,  A.  IMI.  Hidden  treasure  of  Basmola. 

60 
Riis,  J.  A.     Children  of  the  tenements.     52 
Riley,  J.  W.    James  Whitcomb  Biley  reader. 

37 
Bip  Van  Winkle.     Irving.     12 
Ripley.  F.  H.,  and  Schneider,  E.     Art-musie 

readers.    35 
Ripley,  G.  S.     Games  for  boys.     33 
Rinehart,  M.  R.    Tenting  tonight.     60 
Biverside  song  book.     Lawrence  and  Black- 
man.     34 
Robert,  J.  R.    Primer  of  parliamentary  law. 

78 
Bobert  Louis  Stevenson  reader.    38 
Roberts,    C.    6.    D.      Haunter    of    the    pine 

gloom.     23 
Haimters   of  the   silences.      21 

Hoof  and  claw.     23 


Kindred   of  the  wild.     23 

King  of  the  Mamozekel.     23 

Kings  in  exile.     23 

Secret  trail.     21 

Robbins,  E.  "C.  High  school  debate  book. 
78 

Bobin  reader.     Varney.     4 

Bobinson  Crusoe.     Defoe.     45,  81 

Rocheleau,  W.  F.  Great  American  in- 
dustries.    28 

Roe,  A.  S.    Stories  from  Chinese  history.    76 

Rogers,  J.  E.  Earth  and  sky  every  child 
should  know.     18 

Trees  worth  knowing.     19 

Wild    animals     every    child    should 

know.     21 
Bolf  in  the  woods.     Seton.     53 
Rolt-Wheeler,   F.     Aztec  hunters.     26 

Boys'  book  of  the  world  war.     76 

I Monster   hunters.      27 

United  States  service  series.     15 

Wonder  of  war  at  sea.     28 

Wonder  of  war  in  the  air.     28 

Wonder  of  war  in  the  Holy  Land.    28 

Wonder  of  war  on  land.     29 

Bomance  of  aircraft     Smith.     29 
Bomance  of  labor.     Twombly  and  Dana.     29 
Roosevelt,   T.     Letters  to  his   children.     69 
Boosevelt  book.     37 

Stories  of  the  great  west.     72 

Roosevelt,  T.,  and  Lodge,  H.  C.    Hero  tales 

from  American  history.     66 
Ross,   E.     Oliver  Cromwell.     68 
Bose  and  the  ring.     Thackeray.     11 
Roth,  F.     First  book  of  forestry.     19 
Bound  the  year  in  myth   and   song.     Hol- 

brook.      7 
Rowbotham,    F.    J.      Story-lives   of   men   of 

science.     66 
Rowell,   Mrs.   C.   W.     Leaders   of  the  great 

war.     66 
Boy  and  Bay  in  Mexico.     Plummer.     60 
Bunaway  donkey.     Poulsson.     4 
Bimning  Eagle,   the   warrior  girl.     Schultz. 

52 
Ruskin,  J.    King  of  the  golden  river.     11 
Sabin,  E.  L.    Boys'  book  of  frontier  fighters. 


Boys'  book  of  Indian  warriors.     73 

General     Crook     and     the     fighting 

Apaches.     52 
Lost  veith  Lieutenant  Pike.     52 

Opening  the  iron  trail.     52 

Opening    the    west   with    Lewis    and 

Clark.     52 

Pluck  on   the  long  trail.     52 

Safety  first  for  little  folks.     Waldo.     15 
St.  John,  T.  M.     How  two  boys  made  their 

own  electrical  apparatus.     17 

Things    a    boy    should    know    about 

electricity.     17 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


105 


St  Nicholas  magazine.     About  animals.     23 

American   historical   stories.      72 

Bear  stories.     23 

Cat  stories.     23 

Courageous  girls.     66 

Elephant  stories.     23 

Everyday  heroes.     66 

Fairy  tales.     11 

Geographical  stories  series.     60 

Indian  stories.     74 

Island   stories.      60 

Lion  and  tiger  stories.     23 

Panther    stories.      23 

Patriotism   and  the  flag.     66 

St.     Nicholas    book    of    plays    and 

operettas.     40 

St.  Nicholas  Christmas  book.     52 

Sea  stories.     60 

Southern  stories.  60 

Stories  of  brave  dogs.     23 

Stories  of  chivalry.     76 

Story  of  classic  myths.     8,  76 

Stories  of  Greece  and  Rome.     76 

Stories   of  royal  children.     66 

Stories  of  strange  sights.     60 

Stories  of  the  ancient  world.     76 

Stories   of  the   Great  Lakes.     60 

Stories  of  the  middle  ages.     76 

Western   frontier  stories.      60 

St.  Nicholas  book  of  plays  and  operettas.    40 
St.  Nicholas  Christmas  book.    52 
Sanderson,,  E.    Daring  deeds  of  great  path- 
finders.    66 
Sandman;  his  Indian  stories. 
Sanford,    F.    G.      Art   crafts 

31 
Sara  Crewe.     Burnett.     44 
Sarah   Brewster's  relatives.     Peattie.      51 
Sargent,   F.   C.     Com  plants.     19 
Sargent,    W.     Fine   and   industrial   arts   In 

the  elementary  schools.     80 
Saunders,   M.     Beautiful  Joe.     23 
Scandlin,  C.     Hans,  the  Eskimo.     60 
Sohauffler,   R.   M.     Our  American  holidays. 

78 
School  speaker.     Cimmock.     35 
School  speaker  and  reader.     Hyde.     36 
Schuitz,  J.  W.    In  the  great  Apache  forest. 
52 

Lone  Bulls'  mistake.      52 

Running  Eagle,  the  warrior  girl.    52 

With  the  Indians  in  the  Rockies.     74 

Schwartz.  J.  A.    Five  little  strangers.     61 

Little  star  gazers.     16 

Wilderness  babies.     24 

Science    of    everyday    life.      Van    Buskirk 

and  Smith.     16 
Scientific  American  boy.     Bond,     32 


Phillips.     73 
for  banners. 


Scientific  American   boy   at   school.     Bond. 

27 
Scobey,  K.  L.,  and  Home.  0.  N.    Stories  of 

great  musicians.     3ry 
Scott,  iVIrs.  E.  C.    Elizabeth  Bess.    52 

Loyalty  of  EUzabeth  Bess.     &2 

Scott,  Sir  W.     Ivanhoe.     52 

Kenilworth.      52 

Lady  of  the  lake.     40  . 

Quentin  Durward.     52 

Talisman.     53 

Scottish  chiefs.     Porter.     51 

Scouting  with  General  Punston.     Tomllnson. 

54 
Scouting  with  Kit  Carson.     Tomllnson.     54 
Scudder,   H.  W.     Book  of  fables.     8 

Book  of  fables  and  folk  stories.     13 

Book  of  legends.     13 

Children's  book.     37 

George  Washington,     70 

Verse    and    prose    for    beginners    In 

reading.     37 
Sea    stories   for   wonder   eyes.     Hardy.      16 
Seachrest,  E.    Greek  photoplays.     8 
Seaside  and  wayside.     Wright     26 
Search   for  Andrew  Field.     Tomllnson,     54 
Seawell,   M.   E.     Little  Jarvis.     53 

Twelve  naval  captains.     66 

Virginia   cavalier.     53 

Second  book  of  patriotic  stories.       Dickin- 
son.    36 
Secret  garden.     Burnett.     44 
Secret  of  everyday  things.     Fabre.     15 
Secret  trail.     Roberts.     21 
Secrets  of  the  earth.     Fraser.     17 
Secrets  of  the  woods.     Long.     23 
Seed-babies.     Morley.      19 
Seegmlller,    W.      Little    rhymes    for    little 

readers.     40 
See  lye,  E.  E.    Story  of  Washington.     70 
Seers,  H.  W.    Book  of  nature  stories  to  tell 

children.     24 
Serviss,   G.    P.     Astronomy  with  the  naked 

eye.     17 
Seton,    E.   T.     Biography  of  a  grizzly.     24 

Biography  of  a  silver  fox.     24 

Book  of  woodcraft  and  Indian  lore. 

33 

Krag  and  Johnny  Bear.     24 

Lobo,  Rag  and  Vixen.     24 

Rolf  In  the  woods,     53 

Trail  of  the  Sandhill  stag.     24 

Wild  animals  at  home.     24 

Wild  animals  I  have  known.     24 

Seven  little  sisters.     Andrews.     56 
Seventeen.    Tarkington.    54 

Sewing  for  little  girls.     Foster.     30 
Shafer,    D.    C.      Harper's    beginning    elec- 
tricity.    17 
Shakespeare   story   book.      Macleod.     36 


106 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Shaler,  N.  S.     First  book  In  geology.     18 

Story  of  our  continent.     18 

Sharp,  D.  L.    Tall  of  the  year.     19 

Watcher  in  the  woods.     21 

Shaw,    E.     Big  people  and  little  people  of 

other  lands.     61 
Shaw,  E.  R.     Discoverers  and  explorers.     66 
Shelters,  shacks  and  shanties.     Beard.     32 
Sherlock  Holmes.     Doyle.     46 
Short  stories   for  little  people.     Bryce.      35 
Short  stories  from  American  history.    Blais- 

dell  and  Ball.     70 
Short  stories  of  our  shy  neighbors.    Kelly. 

21 
Short  stories  of  the  new  America.     Lasalle. 

49 
Shurter,    E.   D.     Winning  declamations  and 

how  to  speak  them.     37 
Shute,   K.   H.     Land  of  song.     40 
Sidney,    M.     Five    little    Peppers   and   how 

they  grew.     53 
Siepert,  A.  F.    Bird  houses  boys  can  build. 

31 
Silent  Pete.     Otis.     51 
Silver  thread.     Mackay.     40 
Shnba.     White.     55 

Singmaster,    E.     John   Baring's  house.      53 
Six  nursery  classics.     O'Shea.     11 
Sketches  of  American  writers.     Keysor.     64 
Skinner,  A.   M.     Dramatic  stories  for  read- 
ing and  acting.     40 

Story  land  in  play.     40 

Skinner,  A.  IM.,  and  E.  L.  Pearl  story 
book.      37 

Topaz  story  book.     37 

Turquoise    story   book.      37 

Skinner,  A.  M.,  and  Lawrence,  L.  N.    Little 

dramas  for  primary  grades.     40 
Skinner,  A.  IM.,  and  Wickes,  F.  G.    Child's 

own  book  of  verse.     41 
Skinner,    E.   L.     Tales  and  plays  of  Bobin 

Hood.     13 
Skinner,  E.  L.,  and  A.  IM.    Children's  plays. 

41 

Happy  tales  for  story  time.     37 

Nursery  tales  from  many  lands.     13 

Sloane,    T.    W.      Electric    toy    making    for 

amateurs.     17 

S locum,  J.  Around  the  world  in  the  sloop 
Spray.     61 

Siusser,  E.  Y.,  and  others.  Stories  of 
Luther  Burbank.     19 

Small  gardens  for  small  folks.  FuUerton. 
20 

Small  songs  for  small  singers.  Neidllnger. 
34 

Smith,  A.  H.    Four-footed  friends.    24 

Smith,  A.  T.  Montessori  system  of  edu- 
cation.   81 


Smith,   D.   E.     Number  stories  of  long  ago. 

16 
Smith,  E.  B.    Circus  and  all  about  it    4 

Story    of    Pocahontas    and    Captain 

John  Smith.     4 
Smith,  E.  S.    Good  old  stories  for  boys  and 
girls.     37 

Mystery   stories   for  boys  and  girls. 

37 

Peace  and  patriotism.     37 


Smith,  J.  W.     Little  Mother  Goose.     3 
Smith.  L.  R.     Circus  boolt.     4 

Tale  of  Bunny  Cottontail.     4 

Smith,    L.  Y.     Romance  of  aircraft.     29 
Smith,  M.  R.  E.     Eskimo  stories.     61 
Smith,   M.  S.  C.     Maid  of  Orleans.     68 
Smith,  N.  A.     Plays,  pantomimes  and  table- 
aux for  children.     41 

Smith,    N.    G.    R.     Una   and   the   Red   Cross 

knight.     83 
Smythe,  E.  L.    Reynard  the  fox.     4 
Snedeker,  C.   D.     Spartan.     53 
Snell,    R.    J.      Little    White    Fox    and    his 

arctic  friends.     24 

Soolook,  wild  boy.     53  . 

Snowdrop  and  other  stories,    fleller.     3 
Soldier  Rigdale.     Dix.     46 

Some    merry    adventures    of    Robin    Hood. 

Pyle.     13 
Some   strange   corners   of  our   own  country. 

Lummis.      59 
Some   successful  Americans.     Williams.     67 
Some  useful  animals  and  what  they  do  for 

us.     Montieth.     21 
Song  of  Hiawatha.     Longfellow.     39 
Song  of  life.     Morley.     16 
Songs  from  Mother  Goose.     34 
Songs  that  every  child  should  know.    Bacon. 

34 
Sons  of  liberty.     Dyer.     46 
Soolook,  wild  boy.     Snell.     53 
Source  readers  In  American  history.     Hart 

and  others.     71 
South    American    republics,      Marwick    and 

Smith.     59 
Southern  stories.     St.   Nicholas.     60 
Southworth,  G.  V.    Builders  of  our  country. 

66 
Spartan.     Snedeker.     53 
Special   method    in   reading   in   the   grades. 

McMurry.      80 
Speech  defects  in  school  children.     Swift. 

81 
Speed,  J.    Jack  and  Nell  in  field  and  forest. 

IS 
Splendid  wayfaring.     Neihardt.     72 
Spyri,  J.     Heidi.     53,  83 

Little  curly  head.      53 

Mazli.     53 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


107 


Squirrels  and  other  fur-bearers.    Burroughs. 

20 
Stack,    F.    W.      Wild    flowers    every    child 

should  know,     19 
Stafford,    A.    0.     Animal   fables   from    the 

dark  continent     8 
Standard   dictionary.     Funk  and   Wagnalls. 

77 
Stanley,  A.  A.    Animal  folk  tales.     13 
Star  stories  for  little  folks.     Warner.     17 
Star-land.     Ball.     16 
Starr,   E.     Strange  people.     61 
Starr,  L.  B.    Mustafa,  the  Egyptian  boy.    61 
Starrett,  Mrs.  H.  E.    Charm  of  fine  manners. 

6 
Stars  in  song  and  legend.    Porter.     16 
Statistical    abstract   of   the    United    States. 

U.  S.  Statistics  bureau.     78 
Steedman,  A.     Florence  Nightingale.     69 
Steel.    Mrs.    F.   A.   W.     English  fairy  tales 

retold.     83 
Stein,  E.     Little  shepherd  of  Provence.     53 
Stephen's  last  chance.     Ashmun.     42 
Stevenson,    B.    E.     Guide  to  biography  for 

young  readers :  American  men  of 

action.     66 
Home  book  of  verse  for  young  people. 

41 
Stevenson,    B.    E..    and    E.    B.     Days    and 

deeds.     2  vols.     41 
Stevenson,  R.   L.     Child's  garden  of  verses. 

4,  83 

Kidnapped.     53,   83 

Robert   Louis   Stevenson   reader.     38 

Treasure  island.     53,  83 

Stimpson,  M.  S.     Child's  book  of  American 

biography.     66 
Stockton,  F.  R.    Buccaneers  and  pirates  on 
our  coast.     61 

Fanciful  tales.     11 

Stoddard,  W.  0.    Dab  Kinzer.     53 

Little   Smoke.     54 

Talking  leaves.     54 

Stokes,  S.     Ten  conunon  trees.     19 

Stone,  G.   L.,  and  FIckett,  M.  G.    Everyday 
life  in  the  colonies     72 

Trees  in  prose  and  poetry.    19 

Stone,     M.      Bankside    costimie    book    for 

children.    41 
Stories   of  American   discoverers   for    little 

Americans.     Lucia.     71 
Stories  of  American  explorers.     Gordy.     71 
Stories  of  American  inventions.     McFee.    65 
Stories    of    American    life    and    adventure. 

Eggleston.     71 
Stories  of  brave  dogs.    St.  Nicholas.     28 
Stories  of  chivalry.     St.   Nicholas.     76 
Stories  of  classic  myths.     St.  Nicholas.    76 
Stories  of  country  life.     Bradish.     27 
Stories  of  famous  pictures.     Powers.     85 


Stories  of  great  Americans  for  little  Ameri- 
cans.    Eggleston.    63 
Stories  of  great  artists.    Home  and  Scobey. 

34 
Stories    of    great    musicians.      Scobey    and 

Home.     35 
Stories  of  Greece  and  Rome.     St.  Nicholas. 

76 
Stories  of  indxistry.     Chase  and  Clow.    28 
Stories  of  invention.     Hale.     28 
Stories    of    King   Arthur    and    his    knlghta. 

Cutler.     12 
Stories  of  Luther  Burbank.     Slusser.     19 
Stories  of  my  four  friends.     Andrews.     15 
Stories  of  patriotism.     Deming  and  Bemis. 

70 
Stories  of  rocks  and  minerals.    Fairbanks.    17 
Stories  of  royal  children.     St.  Nicholas.     M 
Stories  of  star  land.     Proctor.     16 
Stories  of  strange  sights.     St.  Nicholas.     60 
Stories  of  the  ancient  world.     St.  Nicholas. 

76 
Stories  and  tales.     Anderson.     8 
Stories  of  the  cave  people.     Marcy.     26 
Stories  of  the  Great  Lakes.     St.   Nicholas.^ 

60 
Stories  of  the  great  west.     Roosevelt.     T2 
Stories  of  the  middle  ages.     St.   Nicholas. 
i  76 

Stories  of  olden  time.     Johonnot.     75 
Stories    of    thrift    for    yoxmg    Americans. 

Pritchard  and  Turkington.     6 
Stories  of  travel.     St.  Nicholas.     72 
Stories  of  useful  inventions.     Forman.     28 
Stories  for  children.     Lane.     2 
Stories  for  the  Bible  hour.     Johnson.     5 
Stories  from  Chaucer.     Kelman.     36 
Stories  from  Chinese  history.     Roe,     76 
Stories  from  life.     Harden.     65 
Stories  from  the  Chronicle  of  the  Cid.     37 
Stories  from  the  crusades.     Kelman.     75 
Stories   from   Wagner.      MeSpadden.      13 
Stories    Mother    Nature    told   her    children. 

Andrews.     15 
Stories  to  act.     Wickes.     42 
Stories  to  tell  children.     Bryant     79 
Story  book  of  science.     Fabre.     15 
Story  book  treasures.     Murray.     37 
Story  hour  plays.     Mintz.     40 
Story  land.     Murray.     37 
Story  land  in  play.     Skinner.    40 
Story-lives  of  men  of  science.     Rowbotham. 

66 
Story  of  a  bad  boy.     Aldrlch.     42 
Story  of  Ab.     Waterloo.     27 
Story  of  Abraham  Lincoln.     Hamilton.     OT 
Story  of  Babette.     Stuart.     54 
Story  of  China.     Van  Bergen.     76 
Story   of   Columbus.     Imlach.      68 


108 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Story  of  Columbus  and  Magellan.     Lawler. 

64 
Story  of  com  and  the  westward  migration. 

Brooks,      27 
Story  of  cotton.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  fishes.     Baskett.     27 
Story  of  foods.     Crlssey.     28 
Story  of  glass.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  gold  and  silver.     Bassett.     27 
Story   of   iron.     Bassett.      27 
Story  of  leather.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  little  black  Sambo.    Bannerman.    1 
Story  of  little  Nell.     Dickens.     45 
Story  of  liunber.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  mankind.     Van  Loon.     76 
Story  of  Matka.     Jordan.     22 
Story  of  modern  France.     Guerber.     75 
Story  of  my  life.     Keller.     68 
Story  of  old  France.     Guerber.     75 
Story  of   our  continent.     Shaler.     18 
Story    of    Pocahontas    and    Captain    John 

Smith.     Smith.     4 
Story  of  porcelain.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  Siegfried.     Brooks.     11 
Story  of  silk.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  Sonny  Sahib.     Cotes.     45 
Story  of  sugar.     Bassett.     27 
Story  of  the  Aeneid.     Brooks.     6 
Story  of  the  chosen  people.     Guerber.     5 
Story  of  the  earth.     Washbume.     18 
Story  of  the  English.     Guerber.     74 
Story  of  the  fishes.     Baskett.     20 
Story  of  the  Greek  people.     Tappan.     76 
Story  of  the   Greeks.     Guerber.     75 
Story  of  the  Iliad.     Brooks.     6 
Story  of  the  Odyssey.     Brooks.     6 
Story  of  the  Odyssey.     Palmer.     7 
Story  of  the  other  wise  man.     Van  Dyke. 

55 
Story  of  the  Pilgrims  for  children.     Usher. 

72 
Story  of  the  railroad.     Warman.     29 
Story  of  the  Rhinegold.     Chapin.     11 
Story   of  the   Roman  people.     Tappan.      76 
Story  of  the  Romans.     Guerber.     20 
Story  of  Washington.     Seelye.     70 
Story  of  wool.     Bassett.     27 
Story   plays   for   little   children.     Hall   and 

Palmer.     39 
Story  telling.     Lyman.     80 
Story  telling:  what  to  tell  and  how  to  tell 

it.     Lyman.     80 
Story  land.    Murray.    37 
Story-telling  poems.     Olcott.     40 
jStrange   adventures    of    a    pebble.      Hawks- 
worth.     18 
Strange  lands  near  home.     Lane.     58 
Strange  people.     Starr.     61 
Strong,  F.  L.    All  the  year  round.     16 
Stuart,  R.  M.     Story  of  Babette.     54 


Stuck,   H.     Ten  thousand  miles  with  a  dog 

sled.     61 
Successful  venture.     Deland.     45 
Sue  Orcutt.     Vaile.     55 
Summer      in      Leslie      Goldthwaite's      life. 

Whitney.     56 
Sunbonnet  babies  primer.     Grover.     2 
Sweetster,  K.   D.     Ten  American  girls  from 

history.     66 
Swift,  J.     Gulliver's  travels.     54 
Swift,  W.  B.     Speech  defects  in  school  chil- 
dren.    81 
Swimming  and  watermanship.     Handley.     33 
Swiss  family  Robinson.     Wyss.     56 
Taggart,  M.  A.    Little  grey  house.     54 
Tale  of  Benjamin  Bunny.     Potter.     4 
Tale  of  Bunny  Cottontail.     Smith.     4 
Tale  of  Johnny  Townmouse.     Potter.     4 
Tale  of  Peter  Rabbit.     Potter.     4 
Tale  of  Squirrel  Nutkin.     Potter.     4 
Tale  of  Tom  Kitten.     Potter,     4 
Tales  and  plays  of  Robin  Hood.     Skinner. 

13 
Tales  from  Hans  Anderson.     8 
Talies  from  Shakespeare.     Lamb,     36,  82 
Tales  of  laughter.     WIggin  and  Smith,     11 
Tales  of  little  cats.     Bond,     1 
Tales  of  Mother  Goose.     Perrault.     3 
Tales  of  old  England.    Lansing.     12 
Tales  of  the  bark  lodge,     Hen-Toh.     73 
Tales  of  the  red  children.     Brown  and  Bel 

72 
Tales  of  Troy  and  Greece.     Lang.     7 
Tales  of  wonder.     Wiggin  and  Smith,     11 
Talisman.      Scott.      53 
Talking  beasts,     Wiggin  and   Smith.      8 
Talking  leaves,     Stoddard.     54 
Tanglewood  tales.     Hawthorne.     82 
Tappan,   E.   M.     American  hero  stories,     67 

Elementary   history   of  our  country, 

72 

Golden  goose,  and  other  fairy  tales. 

11 

Hero  stories  of  France.     67 

In  the  days  of  Alfred  the  Great.  74 

In  the  days  of  Queen  Victoria.     69 

Little  book  of  the  flag.     15 


-  Old,  old  story  book.     5 

-  Old  world  hero  stories.     67 

-  Story  of  the  Greek  people.     76 

-  Story  of  the  Roman  people.    76 

-  When  knights  were  bold.     83 


Tarbell,  I.  M-     Boy  Scout's  life  of  Lincoln, 

69 
Tarkington,  B.     Penrod.     54 

Seventeen.     54 

Teaching  a  district  school.     Dlnsmore.     80 
Teaching  language  through  agriculture  and 

domestic   science.     Leiper.     80 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


109 


Teaching  of  history.  Hartwell,  80 
Tell  me  another  story.  Bailey.  79 
Ten  American  girls  from  history.    Sweetster. 

66 
Ten  boys  who  lived  on  the  road  from  long 

ago  to  now.     Andrews.     62 
Ten  common  trees.     Stokes.     19 
Ten  thousand  miles  with  a  dog  sled.    Stuck. 

61 
Tenderfoot  with  Peary.     Borup.     57 
Tennyson,  A.     Poetic  and  dramatic  works. 

41 
Tenting  tonight.     Rinehart.     60 
Texas  blue  bonnet.     Jacobs.     48 
Thacher,  Mrs.  L.  W.    Listening  child.     41 
Thackeray,  W.   M.     Rose  and  the  ring.     11 
Thatcher,   E.     Making  tin  can  toys.     31 
That's  why  stories.     Bryce.     35 
Thayer,   Mrs.    E.   R.   L.     When  mother  lets 

us  draw.     35 
Theiss,  L.  E.    Champion  of  the  foothills.    54 
Things  a  boy  should  know  about  electricity. 

St.  John.     17 
Things  to  make.     Hutton.     30 
Thirty  more  famous  stories  retold.    Baldwin. 

75 
Thompson,  D.  P.    Green  Mountain  boys.    54 
Thompson,  J.  H.    Water  wonders  every  child 

should    know.      18 
Thorndike,    E.    L.      Principles    of    teaching 

based  on  psychology.     81 
Thorne-Thomsen,  East  o'  the  Sun  and  West 

o'  the  Moon.     13 
Three  bears.     Brooke.     1 
Three  bears.     Chadwick.     1 
Three  colonial  boys.     Tomlinson.     54 
Three  Greek  children.     Church.     44 
Three  little  kittens— Chicken  Little.     Chad- 
wick.    2 
Three  little  pigs.     Brooks.     1 
Three  years  with  the  poets.     Hazard.     39 
Through  the  farmyard   gate.     Poulsson.     4 
Tileston,  M.  W.     Children's  hour.     4 
Toby  Tyler.     Otis.     51 
Tom  Brown's  school  days.     Hughes.     48 
Tom  Sawyer.     Twain.     55 
Tomlinson,  E.  T.    Boy  officers  of  1812.     54 

Boy  soldiers  of  1812.     54 

Fighters   young   Americans   want  to 

know.     67 

Places    young    Americans    want    to 

know.     61 

Scouting  with  General  Funston.     54 

Scouting  with  Kit  Carson.     54 

Search  for  Andrew  Field.     54 

Three   colonial  boys.     54 

Tommy  Tinker's  book.     Blaisdell.     1 
Top  of  the  continent.     Yard.     61 
Topaz  story  book.     Skinner.     37 
Towards  the  rising  sun.     Lane.     58 


Towers,  W.  K.    Masters  of  space.    67 
Toy-making  In  school  and  home,     Polklng- 

home.    31 
Track  athletics  up  to  date.     Clark.     32 
Trafton,   G.   H.     Bird  frlenda.     25 
Trail  book.     Austin.     26 
Trail  of  the  Sandhill  stag.     Seton.     24 
Trail  to  the  woods.     Hawkes.     21 
Training  of  wild  animals.     Bostock.     20 
Training  the  boy.     McKeever.     79 
Transportation.     Rocheleau.     28 
Treasure  island,     Stevenson.     53,  83 
Treasury  of  animal  stories.     Gask.     22 
Treasury  of  flower  stories.     McFee.     10 
Treasury  of  Indian  tales.     Bayliss.     7i 
Treasury   of  myths.     McFee.     7 
Tree-dwellers.     Dopp.     26 
Trees    In    prose    and    poetry.      Stone    and 

Fickett.     19 
Trees,  stars  and  birds.     Moseley.     16 
Trees  worth  knowing.     Rogers.     19 
Troop  One  of  the  Labrador.    Wallace.     55 
True,  J.  P.     Iron  star.     54 
True  bear  stories.     Miller.     23 
True  bird  stories  from  my  note  book.   Miller. 

25 
True  Story  of  Columbus.    Brooks.    68  ^ 

True   Story   of  Lafayette.     Brooks.     68 
True  Story  of  Washington.     Brooks.     70 
True  tales  of  birds  and  beasts.     Jordan.    22 
Truly  stories  from  the  surely  Bible.  Howard. 

5 
Turquoise  story  book.     Skinner.     37 
Twain,  M.    Adventures  of  Tom  Sawyer.     55 

Adventures  of  Huckleberry  Finn.  54 

Personal    recollections    of    Joan    of 

Arc.     55 

Prince  and  the  pauper.     55,  83 

Twelve  Christmas  stories.     Dickens.     46 
Twelve  naval  captains,     Seawell,     66 
Twenty    thousand    leagues    under    the    sea. 

55 
Twilight  stories.     Foulke.     36 
Two  little  Confederates.     Page.     51 
Two  little  Southern  sisters  and  their  garden 

plays.     Young.     33 
Two  years  before  the  mast.     Dana.     45 
Twombly,  F.  D.,  and  Dana,  J.  C.     Romance 

of  labor.    29 
Una  and  the  Red  Cross  knight.     Smith.    83 
Uncle  Remus.     Harris.     12 
Uncle  Remus  and  the  Little  Boy.     12 
Uncle  Sam,  detective.     DuPuy.     14 
Uncle   Sam.   wonder-worker.     DuPuy.     14 
Uncle  Sam's  business.     Marriott.     14 
Uncle  Sam's  modem  miracles.     DuPuy.     14 
Uncle  Sam's  secrets.     Austin.     13 
Uncle  Sam's  soldiers.     Austin.     13 
Uncle  Zeb  and   his  friends.     Frentz.     47 
Under  the  lilacs.     Alcott.     42 


110 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Under    the    Red    Cross    flag    at    home    and  | 

abroad.     Boardman.     13 
Ungava  Bob.     Wallace.     55 
U.     S.     Congress.       Official     congressional 

directory.     78 
United  States  service  series.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

15 
U.  S.  Statistics  bureau.     Statistical  abstract 

of  the  United  States.     78 
U.    S.    Weather    bureau.      Forecasting    the 

weather.     18 
Up  from  slavery.     Washington.     69 
Usher,    R.    G.      Story    of   the   Pilgruns   for 

children.     72 
Valle,  C.  M.     Orcutt  girls.     55 

Sue  Orcutt.     55 

Van  Bergen,  R.     Story  of  China.     76 

Van     Buskirk,     E.     F.,    and    Smith,    E.    L. 

Science  of  everyday  life.     16 
Van  Dyke,  H.    Story  of  the  other  wise  man. 

55 
Van  Loon,  H.  W.    Story  of  Mankind.    76 

Ancient  man.     27 

Varney,  M.  T.     Robin  reader.     4 

Verne,   J.     Twenty  thousand  leagues  under 

the  sea.     55 
Verrill,  A.  H.    Harper's  air  craft  for  boys. 


Harper's  book  for  young  gardeners. 

20 

Harper's  book  for  young  naturalists. 

21 
Verse   and  prose  for  beginners  in  reading. 

Scudder.     37 
Viking  tales.     Hall.     12 
Virginia  cavalier.     Seawell.     53 
Vision  of  Sir  Launfal.     Lowell.     39 
Vive  la  France.     Knipe.     49 
Vizetelly,    F.    H.     Desk-book   of    errors    in 

English.     78 
Vocational  guidance.     Davis.     79 
Vocational  guidance  of  youth.     Bloomfleld. 

70 

Vocational  reader.     Pressey.     66 

Volland  Mother  Goose.     83 

Wade,   M.   H.     Dolls  of  many  lands.     33 

Leaders  to  liberty.     67 

Llght-bringers.     67 

Little  folks  of  North   America.     61 

Pilgrims  of  today.     67 

Wonder-workers.     67 

Waldo,   L.   M.     Safety  first  for  little  folks. 

15 
Walker,  A.  J.     Little  plays  from  American 

history.      41 
Walker,  Joseph.     George  Washington.     70 
Wallace,   D.     Grit-a-plenty.     55 

Troop  One  of  the  Labrador,     55 

Ungava  Bob.     55 

Wallace,  L.    Ben-Hur.    55 


Warman,  C,     Story  of  the  railroad.     29 
Warner,  G.  F.     Star  stories  for  little  folks. 

17 
Washburne,  C.  W.,  and  H.  C.     Story  of  the 

earth.     18 
Washington,  B.  T.    Up  from  slavery.     69 
Watcher  in  the  woods.     Sharp.     21 
Water  babies.     Kingsley.     10 
Water    wonders    every    child    should    know. 

Thompson.     18 
Waterloo,  S.    Ab,  the  cave-man.     27 

Story  of  Ab.     27 

Waterman,  A.   H.     Little  candy  book  for  a 
little  girl.     31 

Little    preserving   book   for    a    little 

girl.     31 
Watty  &  Co.     Putnam.     51 
Ways  of  the  six-footed.     Comstock.     25 
Ways  of  the  wood  folk.     Long.     23 
Weaver,   E.  W.     Choosing  a  career.     79 
Weaver's   children.     Wilkins.     56 
Webster,  J.     Just  Patty.     55 
Webster's  Collegiate  dictionary.     78 
Webster's  New  International  dictionary.    78 
Weed,  C.   M.     Wild  flower  families.     19 
Weeks,  A.   D.     Education  of  tomorrow.     81 
Weeks,  R.  M.     People's  school.     79 
Weir,  Mrs.   F.  R.     Merry  Andrew.     55 
Western  frontier  stories.     St.  Nicholas.     60 
What  daddies  do.     Livingston.     3 
What  happened  to   Inger  Johanne.     Zwllg- 

meyer.     56 
What  Katy  did.     Coolidge.     44 
What  shall  we  do  now?     Canfleld.     32 
What  shall  we  play?     Dunn.     38 
What  the  pictures  say.     Moore.     34 
When  Buffalo  ran.     Grinnell.     47 
When  knights  were  bold.     Tappan.     83 
When  life  was  young.     Dodge.     38 
When  mother  lets  us  carpenter.    Adams.    29 
When  mother   lets   us   cook.     Johnson.     30 
When  mother  lets  us  draw.     Thayer.     35 
When  mother  lets  us  help.     Johnson.     30 
When  mother  lets  us  give  a  party.    Yale.    33 
Whitcomb,    I.    P.     Young  people's  story   of 

art.      35 

Young  people's  story  of  music.    35 

White  Indian  boy.     Wilson.     56 

White,  E.  0.     Blue  Aunt.     55 

Borrowed   sister.     55 


White,  IMary.    How  to  make  baskets.     31 

Book  of  games  with  directions  how 

to  play  them.     33 
White,  8.  E.    Camp  and  trail.     3 

Magic  forest.     55 

Slmba.     55 

Land   of  footprints.     61 

Whitney,  IMrs.  A.  D.  T.     Summer  in  Leslie 

Goldwaite's   life.     56 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Ill 


Whitney  and  Perry.    Four  American  Indians. 

74 
Whittier,  J.   G.     "Child  life  in  poetry"  and 

"Oiild  life  in  prose."     38 
Whittum,    L.   S.     Little  folks   of  far  away 

lands.     61 
WIckes,   F.   G.     Stories  to  act.     42 
Wide  world.     Lane.     58 
Widow   O'Callaghan's   boys.      Zollinger.      56 
Wiggin,     K.     D.      Bird's    Christmas    carol. 

(play)     41 

Bird's  Christmas  carol,     56 

Polly  Oliver's  problem.     56 

Rebecca   of    Sunnybrook   farm.      56 

Wiggin.    K.    D.,    and    Smith,    N.   A.     7alry 

ring.     11 

Golden  numbers.     41 

Magic  casements.     11 

Pinafore  palace.     41 

Posy  ring.     41 

Tales  of  laughter.     11 

Tales  of  wonder.     11 

Talking  beasts.     8 

Wigwam    stories    told    by    North    American 

Indians.     Judd.     73 
Wilbur,      M.      A.     Everyday     business     for 

women.     78 
Wild  animals  at  home.     Seton.     24 
Wild    animals    every    child    should    know. 

Rogers.     56 
Wild  animals  I  have  known.     Seton.     24 
Wild   animals    of   North   America.      Nelson. 

21 
Wild  bird  guests.     Baynes.     24 
Wild  flower  families.     Weed.     19 
Wild    flowers    every     child     should    know. 

Stack.     19 
Wild   life   under  the  equator.     Du   Chaillu. 

22 
Wild  neighbors.     Ingersoll.     21 
Wilderness  babies.      Schwartz.     24 
Wilderness   ways.     Long.      23 
Wildman,   E.     Famous  leaders  of  industry. 

67 
Wiley,   B.,   and    Edick,   G.   W.     Lodrix,   the 

little  lake-dweller.     27 
Wilkins,  E.     Weaver's  children.     56 
Williams,    S.      Some    successful   Americans. 

67 
Williston,  T.  P.    Japanese  fairy  tales.     11 
Wilmot-Buxton,   E.   M.     Jeanne  d'  Arc.     68 
Wilson,  E  N.     Whit«  Indian  boy.     56 
Wilson,   G.   L.     Indian  hero  tales.     74 

Myths  of  the  red  children.     74 

Wiltse,  8.  E.     Folklore  stories  and  proverbs. 

4 
Windermere  series  of  books  for  children.    83 
Winning  declamations — how  to  speak  them. 

Shurter.     37 
Winning  their  way.     Faris.     63 


Winston   "Easy-to-read"   story   books.    4 
Winter,  M.     Aseop  for  children.     8 
Winslow,  I.  0.     Winalow's  geography  series. 

61 
Wireless  man.     Collins.     28 
Wireless  telegraphy  and  telephone.     Massle 

and  Underhill.     17 
Wit  of  a  duck.     Burroughs.     15 
With  Crockett  and  Bowie.     Munroe.     50 
With  the  Indians  in  the  Rockies.     Schulta. 

74 
With  the  men  who  do  things.     Bond.     27 
Wolf  patrol.     Finnemore.     46 
Wonder  book.     Hawthorne.     82 
Wonder  book  of  horses.     Baldwin.     9 
Wonder  book  of  the  atmosphere.     Houston. 

18 
Wonder  of  war  at  sea.     Rolt-Wheeler.     28 
Wonder  of  war  in  the  air.     Rolt-Wheeler. 

28 
Wonder   of   war   in   the  Holy    land.      Rolt- 
Wheeler.     28 
Wonder  of  war  on  land.     Rolt-Wheeler.    29 
Wonder  tales  from  Wagner.     Chapln.     11 
Wonder-workers.     Wade.     67 
Wonderful  adventures  of  Nils.    Lagerlof.    10 
Wonderful   chair.     Browne.      9 
Wonders  of  the  jungle.     Ghosh.     21 
Wood,   C.    D.     Animals:   their  relation  and 

use  to  man.     22 
Wood,  E.    Boys'  book  of  pioneers.    67 
Wood,  N.  B.    Lives  of  famous  Indian  chief*. 

74 
Wood  and  water  friends.     Hawkes.     22 
Wood  folk  at  school.     Long.     23 
Work-a-day  heroes.     Fraser.     63 
Working  my  way  around  the  world.    Franck. 

58 
World  almanac.     78 

Wright,  H.  C.     Children's  stories  in  Ameri- 
can history.     72 
Children's  stories  in  American  litera- 
ture.    38 
Wright,  J.  M.    Seaside  and  wayside.    4  vols. 

26 
Wyss,   J.    D.   von.     Swiss  family  Robinson. 

56 
Yale,  Mrs.  E.  D.    When  mother  lets  us  give 

a  party.     33 
Yard,  R.  S.    Top  of  the  continent     61 
Young,  E.  R.    My  dogs  in  the  northland.    61 
Young,  M.     Two  little  Southern  sisters  and 

their  garden  plays.     33 
Young  citizen.     Dole.     14 
Young  citizen's  own  book.     Fraser.     14 
Yoiuig  citizen's  reader.     Relnsch.     15 
Young  folks'  book  of  etiquette.     Griffin.     5 
Young  folks'  book  of  ideals.     Forbush.     5 
Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  common  things. 
Champlin.     77 


112 

Toung  folks'  cyclodaedia  of  literature  and 
art.     Champlln.     77 

Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  natural  history. 
Champlin    and    Lucas.      77 

Young  folks'  cyclopaedia  of  persons  and 
places.     Champlin.     77 

Young  folks'  encyclopaedia  of  etiquette. 
Braddy.     5 

Young  forester.     Grey.     47 

Young  lion  of  Flanders.    Kueller.     49 

Young  Macedonian  in  the  army  of  Alex- 
ander.    Church.     44 


AUTHOR  AND  TITLE  INDEX. 


Young  people's  history  of  Holland.     Griffls. 

75 
Young  people's  history  of  music.     Macy.    34 
Yoiing    people's    history    of    the    Pilgrims. 

Griflfis.     71 
Young  people's  story  of  art.    Whitcomb.    35 
Young  people's  story  of  music.     Whitcomb. 

35 
Zitkala-Sa.     Old  Indian  legends.     74 
Zollinger,  G.     Maggie  McLanehan.     56 

Widow  O'Callaghan's  boys.     56 

Zwilgmeyer,    D.     What   happened   to   Inger 

Johanne.     56 


\? 


LIST  OF  PUBLISHERS  113 

List  of  Publishers 


Altemu's.    Henry  Altemus  Co.,  1326-1336  Vine  Street,  Philadelphia. 

Amer.  Bapt.  Pub.  American  Baptist  Publishing-  Society,  1701-3  Chest- 
nut St.,  Philadelphia. 

Amer.  Bk.    American  Book  Co.,  330  East  22d  St.,  Chicago. 

Appleton.    Daniel  Appleton  &  Co.,  35  West  3  2d  St.,  New  York. 

Atkinson,  Mentzer.  Atkinson,  Mentzer  &  Co.,  2210  South  Park  Ave., 
Chicago. 

Atlantic  Monthly  Press,  15  West  44th  St.,  New  York. 

Barse  &  Hopkins,  21-39  Division  St.,  Newark,  N.  J. 

Barnes.     A.  S.  Barnes,  118  East  25th  St.,  New  York. 

Beckley.     Beckley-Cardy  Co.,  17-21  East  23d  St.,  Chicago. 

Bobbs.    Bobbs-Merrill  Co.,  University  Square,  Indianapolis,  Ind. 

Boni  &  Liveright,  105  West  40th  St.,  New  York. 

Boy  Scouts  of  America,  200  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Bradley.  Milton  Bradley  Co.  Agents:  Hoover  Bros,,  922  Oak  St., 
Kansas  City,  Mo. 

Burt.    A.  L.  Burt  Co.,  114-12fO  East  23d  St.,  New  York. 

Camp  Fire  Girls,  inc.,  31  East  17th  St.,  New  York. 

Century.     Century  Co.,  353  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Clode.     Edward  J.  Clode,  156  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Cole  &  Morgan,  50  Church  St.,  New  York. 

Comstock.    William  T.  Comstock  Co.,  23  Warren  St.,  New  York. 

Cosmopolitan.  Cosmopolitan  Book  Corporation,  119  West  40th  St., 
New  York. 

Crowell.     T.  Y.  Crowell  Co.,  426-438  West  Broadway,  New  York. 

Daughaday.     Daughaday  &  Co.,  168  North  Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago. 

Ditson.     Oliver  Ditson  Co.,  178-179  Tremont  St.,  Boston.  ^ 

Dodd.     Dodd,  Mead  &  Co.,  4th  Ave.  and  30th  St.,  New  York., 

Dodge.     Dodge  Publishing  Co.,  53-55  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Doran.    George  H.  Doran  Co.,  244  Madison  Ave.,  New  York. 

Doubleday.    Doubleday,  Page  &  Co.,  Garden  City,  N.  Y. 

Duffield.     Duffield  &  Co.,  211  East  19th  St.,  New  York. 

Dutton.    B.  P.  Dutton  &  Co.,  681  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Educ.  Publ.     Educational  Publishing  Co.,  2457  Prairie  Ave.,  Chicago. 

Flanagan.    A.  Flanagan  Co.,  521  South  Laflin  St.,  Chicago. 

Forbes.     Forbes  &  Co.,  443  South  Dearborn  St.,  Chicago. 

Funk.     Funk  &  Wagnalls  Co.,  354-360  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Ginn.     Ginn  &  Co.,  2301-2311  Prairie  Ave.,  Chicago. 

Grosset.     Grosset  &  Dunlap,  1140  Broadway,  New  York. 

Harcourt.    Harcourt,  Brace  &  Co.,  1  West  47th  St.,  New  York. 

Harlow.     Harlow  Publishing  Co.,  Oklahoma  City. 

Harper.     Harper  &  Bros.,  Franklin  Square,  New  York. 

Heath.     D.  C.  Heath  &  Co.,  1815  Prairie  Ave.,  Chicago. 

Henley.     Norman  W.  Henley  Publishing  Co.,  2  West  45th  St.,  New  York. 

Hinds.  Hinds,  Hayden  &  Eldredge,  11-15  Union  Square,  West,  New 
York. 

Holt.     Henry  Holt  &  Co.,  19  West  44th  St.,  New  York. 

Houghton.     Houghton,  Mifflin  Co.,  2451-2459  Prairie  Ave.,  Chicago. 

Hubbell.     Hubbell-Leavens  Co.,  440  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Jacobs.    George  W.  Jacobs,  1628  Chestnut  St.,  Philadelphia. 

Jones.    Marshall  Jones  Co.,  212  Summer  St.,  Boston. 

Kerr.     Charles  H.  Kerr  Co.,  341  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago. 

Lane.    John  Lane  &  Co.,  786  Sixth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Lippincott.    J.  B.  Lippincott  Co.,  East  Washington  Square,  Philadelphia. 


I 


114  LIST   OF   PUBLISHERS 

Little.    Little,  Brown  &  Co.,  34  Beacon  St.,  Boston. 

Longmans.     Longmans,  Green  &  Co.,  443-449  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York, 

Lothrop.     Lothrop,  Lee  &  Shepard,  Boston. 

McClurg.    A.  C.  McClurg  &  Co.,  330-353  East  Ohio  St.,  Chicago. 

McKay.    David  McKay  Co.,  604-608  Washington  Square,  Philadelphia. 

MacmillajQ.     Macmillan  Co.,  64-66  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 

Manual  Arts  Press,  Peoria,  111. 

Merriam.    G.  I.  Merriam  Co.,  Springfield,  Mass. 

Merrill.     Charles  E.  Merrill  Co.,  323-325  East  Twenty-third  St.,  Chicago. 

Mission.  Educ.     Missionary  Education  Movement,  150  Fifth  Ave.,  New 

York. 
Moffat.    Moffat,  Yard  &  Co.,  30  Union  Square,  New  York. 
Munn.     Munn  &  Co.,  233  Broadway,  New  York. 
Nelson.     Thomas  Nelson  &  Sons,  381  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York. 
Newson,     Newson  &  Co.,  623  South  Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago. 
Nohle.     Lloyd  Adams  Noble,  31  West  15th  St.,  New  York. 
Page.    The  Page  Co.,  53  Beacon  St.,  Boston. 
Palmer.     Palmer  Co.,  120  Bovlston  St.,  Boston. 
Penn.     Penn  Publishing  Co.,  92f5  Filbert  St.,  Philadelphia. 
Pilgrim  Press,  14  Beacon  St.,  Boston. 

Publ.  School  Pub.     Public  School  Publishing  Co.,  Bloomington,  111. 
Putnam.     G.  P.  Putnam's  Sons,  2  West  54th  St.,  New  York. 
Rand.     Rand,  McNally  &  Co.,  536  South  Clark  St.,  Chicago. 
Reilly  &  Lee  Co.,  1006  South  Michigan  Ave.,  Chicago. 
RevelL    Fleming  H.  Revell.,  17  North  Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago. 
Row.     Row,  Peterson  &  Co.,  623  South  Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago. 
Saalfield.     Saalfiield  Publishing  Co.,  Akron,  Ohio, 
Sanborn.     B.  H.  Sanborn  &  Co.,  50  Beacon  St.,  Boston. 
Schirmer.     G.  Schirmer,  3  East  43d  St.,  New  York. 
Scribner.     Charles  Scribner's  Sons,  597-599  Fifth  Ave.,  New  York. 
Silver.     Silver  Burdette  &  Co.,  623  South  Wabash  Ave.,  Chicago. 
Small.     Small,  Maynard  &  Co.,  41  Mt.  Vernon  St.,  Boston. 
Stokes.     Frederick  A.  Stokes  Co.,  443-449  Fourth  Ave.,  New  York. 
Supt.  of  Documents,  U.  S.  Government  Printing  Office,  Washington,  D.  C 
Volland.     P.  F.  Volland  Co.,  56  East  Washington  St.,  Chicago. 
Warne.     Frederick  Warne  &  Co.,  26  Weet  22d  St.,  New  York. 
Whitman.     Albert  Whitman  &  Co.,  323  West  Randolph  St.,  Chicago. 
Wilde.    W.  A.  Wilde,  Madison  Terminal  Bldg.,  Chicago. 
Winston.     John  C.  Winston  Co.,  1006-1016  Arch  St.,  Philadelphia. 
World  Bk.     World  Book  Co.,  Yonkers -on -Hudson,  N.  Y. 
Yale  Univ.  Press.     Yale  University  Prefes,  15  West  44th  St.,  New  York. 


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